a ie ee ae aie alien “The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Ferecast 3 ~ Cloudy, Light Frost Tonight _ Details page two a ae 5 * © Bar ) ley Dies While Pontiac Students Pay Tribute to Washington Claims Marine Was Drinking Commandant of Corps. Advises Court Martial for Death of Six WASHINGTON uw — The Marine Corps said today Sgt. Matthew McKeon was .under the influence of liguor when he ordered recruits on a Tight march in which six were drowned. Court martial trial of McKeon was recommended. * * . Gen. Randolph McCall! Pate, Ma- rine Corps commandant, also or- dered Maj. Gen. J. C. Burger transferred from the command of the Parris Island, S. C base, where the tragedy occurred. . training) AP Phete Taken for Pontiac Press¢q —— WREATHS FOR WASHINGTON TOMB graders carry wreaths to be placed at the — Four Pontiac ninth Mount Vernon tomb of George Washington. The flowers were placed al the tomb last week when Madison and Washington ninth graders took the annual trip lo the Capital city. Left to right are Cathy Johnson and Harrison Mun- son, both of Washington Junior High and Lyle Bassinger and Joanne Dembinski, both of James Madison. While the 225 local aie were in Washington, they heard the National Symphony Orchestra pl ay its first_ program ,of Music for Young America, a series of concerts for visiting school students. t Snow-Covered Terrain Fails to Stymie Trouters By JACK PATTERSON Outdoors Writer, Pontiac Press Pontis GRAYLING+-Sunday’s snowstorm came close to Motor worker, won a temporaty, tle with * gee Wins Injunction in Church Fight Count Gider Restrains Area Jehovah Witnesses From Excluding Man What Chester Waugh calls the, opening round in his 18-month bat-) Jehovah Witnesses was) ceded to him yesterday. Waugh, a 36-year-old returning us’ to our native outdoors and health. Wet “cuit court injunction restraining snow on top of rain-soaked secondary roads adds up to“ interesting driving. We felt like a remnant ing about on our appointed rounds. It took more than of the last Ice Age, slither- In addition he directed q Weather to stop the area’s hardy fisherman, however, sweeping reorganization of re- proving—if anything—that opening trouters are but jone jump ahead of the guy* erult training. Pate’s recommendations were made public when he. appeared! before the House Armed Services) Committee to report on a corps) investigation of the April 8 inci- dent, the actions he has taken and the measures he has proposed to. the Secretary of the Navy, * * * , The decision on convening a general court martial to trv Mc- Keon is up to the secretary, Charles S. Thomas DISCIPLINE GOOD Pate said that over the years the system of stern discipline and tough training of recruit# admin- istered by experienced non-com- missioned officers, had proved good for the Marines * * «& But he added that prac- tices have crept in which . do not comport with the dig- nity of the individual ''- Therefore, Pate said, he is put- ting in a new system of supervi- sion both at Parris Island and the other Marine recruit training cen- ter, San Diego, Calif. He Said he will oversee this new system himself through a chain of officers pepoene directly to him. -brookies’ “some with the net. At Woodland Bpr ings \Club we learned that in ad- dition to it being the two hundred fifth successive day with snow on the club: grounds, Sunday also pro- vided fair fishing for brook trout. Dr. and Mrs Milt Hathaway. Dr land Mrs. Vern Abbott and the Lee Voorhees’ were some of the local. people who took advantage of the extremes. The club’s rainbows refused all offerings and were content te leap about and show themselves to the exasperated fishermen. The Lewiston area's trout -cen- sus is in sure and certain danger of. a radical decline due to the combined efforts of the Stu Har- nacks of Pontiac. GOT SUNBURNED Michigan weather being whal it- is, we shouldn't have been sur- prised to see Monday dawn clear and bright. We were surprised, however, to be fishing to a bet i¢ sorenied on Page 2, Col. indifference to weather Possible Light Frost Predicted for Tonight : -The US. Weather Bureau's pre- diction for tonight is partly cloudy light The low tonight will be 36-40. The forecast for tomorrow is con- tinued cloudiness with little change in temperature, The high will be 54-58 - om and a chance of scattered frost. The Weath®r Bureaiis outtodk rehurctr¢n Drayton Plains which he| Twining, Air Force chief of staff for cw al, the next five days 1s rather with minor day to day changes in temperature. There-will be a chance of showers about Thursday, Saturday night and Sun- day The lowest thermometer reading in downtown Pontiac preceding & a.m. was 38 degrees. The mercury rose to 54 at 1 P m Signs Education Bill LANSING «® — Gov. Williams to- day signed a bill providing a record high $69.608.4103 for higher educa- tion purposes in the fiscal year starting July 1 Jehovah Witnesses from preventing Air Force Needs Several Billions Gen. Offset | WASHINGTON (AP) Must Be 'Gen. Curtis LeMay’s asser-| ition that the Russians in a. ifew years may have greater) striking power. the United States. prompted Sen. Jackson. (D-, today for more in| jair-atomic than Wash) to call “several billions” 'Air Force Funds. a Senate Armed Services terday heard LeMay, chief of the Strategic Air Com- pan, testify the Soviets ‘already have more range bombers than this country, and are producing ‘still more. Le May said this means the Rus- sians ‘‘will have greater striking| power than we will have’ in the 1958-1960 period “under our pres-| ent plans and programs.”’ As of now; the general said, this country can win “any war cautioned, ‘‘we are not capable of winning it without this coun- try receiving very serious dam- age.” . aa Jackson said in an interview he him from entering their church | package that Gen. LeMay testified | and praying there, Waugh, who claims he has been a Witness since 1940 and has | served actively in the religious organization, says he Was ‘*dis- | fellowshiped” in 1954 for being “a brother-hater and a meddler.” William P. Strong, congrega- tion leader named in Waugh's pe-| tition for the injunction, says he “made himself scripturally objec-| tionable to the congregation.”’ The petition claimed Strong and other members of the congrega-| tion had ‘ ‘conspired together to pre- vent Waugh from worshiping at, a public church or other churches.” Waugh says he was twice for-| lof B52 all- -jet intercontinental bom- mittee report on its operations as ‘it, cibly Hall,’ ejected from “Kingdom, the local congregation's) says he helped build, and he has been asked to leave Witness gath-| erings in Milford, Detroit, Orion and Lapeer, he said. Waugh said his aim. in the fight’ Secretary of Defense Wilson low- lowed to: expand freely. into is to force judicial proceedings of the religious group to be held in public. He calls the trial which pre- ceded hrs expulsion ee better than a kangaroo’ court.’ Armed with the injunction and accompanied by a Sheriff's deputy, Waugh attended services Saturday night and. Sunday. He terday he was segregated from the congregation and watched by guards to’prevent his speaking or demonstrating, Lake} said yes-, is necessary.’ “I don't know of a more com-) jpetent expert in the field — of | strategic air power,'’ Jackson said) lof LeMay “No one can speak with equal) |authority. And he says we need more BS%, bases, jet tankers and [skilled professional airmen to ‘keep Russia deterre | ‘The new defense oe of | about 35 billiog ‘dollars at ‘first called for about 16'; billions for the Air Force. millions, with most of the addi jtional request earmarked for in- creased and accelerated output ibers. | Jackson said Gen. Nathan F had asked a minimum of 20 bil ‘lions, that former Secretary of the} Air Force Harold Talbott cut this to Bolster Peace LeMay Asserts. Soviet Nuclear Growth Jackson is a member of subcommittee which yes-: long- Sede ee | It was my privilege to go through two Democratic — fee ALBEN W. ‘An Unforgettable M Address Ends Caveat BARKLEY an Barkley at 2 Political Writer Recalls Conventions) By JOE HAAS national conventions with Alben Barkley. And in each ‘he was the most unforgettable man. At Philadelphia in 1948 he gave the keynote speech ) |believes “‘it would take several bil-| Which pulled the convention out¢of the doldrums. From) lions to provide the complete a maze of discouraging circumstances that plagued the party, it put the pep into the delegates that led to the GM Says Senate | Report Unfair. | Claims Staff Findings! | Show Emotional Rather Than Factual Record» Later this was boosted by some} General Motors Corporation has characterized the Senate subcom-| “wholly unwarranted” in a state- | ment regarding a committee staff) 'yreport following a hearing headed tions. |by Senator O'Mahoney (D-Wyo). I The committee report questioned ~*homination and election of ‘Harry Truman. AL Chicago in 1952, where the convention again ‘met .in a spirit of gloom, another man was the key- noter. But it was a poor attempt at what appeared to be an impossible task. Barkley's talk, which followed It, was intended to be a sort of sec- landing speech, but it stole the show as no other show ever was stolen. It proved to be the real keynote een: and drew the greatest ova- - of the entire convention. quote from my own story about ERE, appeared in these col- umns on July 24, 1952: “It wags the ovation of all ova- was the Veep's greatest hour. It was the first time the convention really listened. It made it forget the listed keynoter who to just above 18 billions, and that Whether or not GM should be al-| preceded him. ered it still further. -Congress still has not acted on the defense budget Look Out, Lampreys WASHINGTON ® — A bill to sef up an organization, in cooperation with Canada, to eradicate the fish- killing sea lamprey in the Great Lakes was passed yesterday: by the Senate. The measure now goes to ‘the House. New GMC Trucks Emphasize Versatility An improved and expanded line of heavy-duty.GMC trucks de- signed to give peak performance in both highway hauling and off- the-road operations was announced vice voday by Philip J. Monaghan, president of General Motors and general manager of GMC Truck and Coach Division. at * * * The heavy-duty GMCs include an expanded line of versatile tan- 7 NEW HEAV y. DUTY GMC DIESE L — Hard at work in a crushed fick. hauling -operation, this GMC model DW630 diesel-powered, tan- dem axle dump truck shows one gf the many off-the-road functions dem-axle models. a wide range of ‘four-wheel vehicles with moré powerful gasoline and .diesel en- gines, and engineering advances to give greater Vehicle durability and performance complete line trucks offers un- Monaghan “This year's heavy-duly GMC rivaled versatility,” said “Many” of our hicles, including the ven of heavy-duty majority of the tandem-axle. models. were de- hearings. signed for combined highway and off-the-road work. Optional equip- ment like frame reinforcements and a great selection of axle ratios are available’ Providing a spread’ in hauling capacities, the heavy-duty line ranges from four-wheel gas- oline models with 22,000-pound gross vehicle weight to tandem- axle vehicles with 90.000-pound gross combination weight. wide Several entirely new models, including an FW550 dual-pur- pose, tandem-axle tractor and a tandem-axle..W670, are offered. Expanded use of V-8 engines is evident in the heavy-duty line. with models powered by either the 210-horsepower or a 180-horsepow- er V8. ‘Twelve-volt electrical systems are standard equipment on all the heavy-duty vehicles, as well as tubeless tires With only fwo parts. the tire, on conventional tires, the tubeless tire is lighter and permits greater payloads, smaller parts inventories for truckers. They eliminate the danger of rings blowing off. *_ * «© Although emphasizing a dual use -jof highway and off-road versa- “performed effortlessly by GMC Truck & Coach oa inn's versati ile heavy-duty trucks. tility, the heavy-duty trucks were designed for vehicle compactness and lightness desired in over-the- road operations, new | fields. It suggested further shady by Congress to curb what the com- mittee termed. a trend. foward mo- ne ypol) Ne The GM antrument said: “Gan | “He woke up the convention just as he had in Philadelphia | four years ago, when he put the | | party on the way te success in November."” In that Chicago convention I sat -|Kentucky, - president of the United W4th YEAR ee ke kt a “PONT: AC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1956 —30 PAGES — ASSOCIATED Pe an eT armage PHOTOR Te aking Address Veep Succumbs toHeart Attack — at Virginia Rally Death at 78 Concludes - Long Political Career of Kentucky Senator —Sen. Alben W. Barkley of former vice States, collapsed and died yesterday on the speaker's platform at a university political gathering, Barkley, 78, slumped to the floor after a keynote address to Washington an Lee University students as- sembled in a mock Demo- cratic Nationa: Conven- tion. Dr. Robert ‘Munger, who arrived seven minutes later as ambulance attendants were attempting to ad- minister oxygen, said "he aa of a héart attack. Today the “Veep” of the Tru- man administration made tis final journey to Washington. Four _studeuts from Washington and Lee and four from nearby Vir- ginia Military Institute accom- panied the body, accord with Barkley's wishes, morrow morning in Fountry Methodist Church, "Washington, _ (See off other stories, page 4.) conducted | by the Rev. Dr. Fred- erick Brown Harris, chaplain of the Senate. Burial will be Friday in Barkley’s home town, —— i Ky, cago in August—but had made up his mind: to attend. He said he wouldn’; be a candidate for nomi- nation for the presidency. { CRIES OF ‘NO, NO’ -There were criés of ‘‘No, no,” and ,when he had quieted the ‘jtumult he said: “T have been in. years gone by, But all fire apparatus is automo. tive now and not horse-drawn.” .* * LJ es = Reminiscently, he recalled he'd been a delegate-at-large to every Democratic National Convention since 1920; a junior, then a senior (eens of Congress; a junior lsenator; a senior senator; major- lity Senate leader; vice president; ‘then junior senator again. “Tt am willing to be a junior,” | be said, “I am giad to sit in the back row, for I would rather be eral Motors officials submitted |) the press section within 20 feet a servant in the house of the voluminaus information to the subcommittee on antitrust and | monopoly about every phase of our business, “A careful reading of the sub- (Continued on Page 2, Col. | Security and You Facts on Social Security, re Hole oR —| the mighty.” Then he collapsed. Two students on the platform tried to break his fall. The 1,700 people in. Doremus committee staff report shows that tirement and pensions form the | 'gymnasium sat dumfounded. Gov, little consideration was given to basis for a new series of articles ‘Thomas B. Stanley of Virginia, these facts by the staff in prepar- by an Associated Press writer. , who had introduced him, grasped ing the repert and drawing their They will appear three times a |Mrs. Barkley’s arm and escorted conclusions, which are wholly un-| warranted. This report does not. fairly represent the record of the Instead it reflects the same emotional, rather than fac- week. Read the first today on page 3. { a Sontinued on n Page 2, Col. 8) her to the platform. Rep. Burr Confira 2 Acting Ranks tual, approach to the ‘case study” of General Motors that pervaded the hearings themselves’ pourri Judge Jumps Fine for Drunk Drivers LOUISVILLE, Ky «” Police court Judge Peter B. Muir has raised the minimum fine drunken driving in Lowsville from $100 to $200 Announce 6 Promotions in City Police Department Six Pontiac police offic The appointments Bere Ile said the crime was getting bert W. Straley and ap-* ‘worse and worse ” proved by. City Manager. And if $200 fines dont break Walter K. Willman. up the practice of drinking — and driving.’ the judge said, ‘we will At ceremonies in police set. the minimum even higher ‘headquarters, _several ‘re- The Bare Facts DALLAS (\#—A husband com- plained in a divorce tnal that his) wife drank too.much. The wife countere udist and made her go to nudist Te8U; nee said she had to Supervisory officer in the Traffic. ~ and rim, instead of the five or stx“drink to keep from being embar- and Safety bureau; Lt. Wilkam F. . ‘Nesbitt, who will abe in cherie meetings. She rassed. The wdge is still ponder ing the ‘case In Toda ys Press County News : RR | Editorials. | ........ 6 Sports . 18, 19, 20 Theaters re | | TV & Radio Ereqrecme ? d9 Wilson, Earl as 29 Women's Pages. ..../.14, 14, 15 itive assignments in the Detec-| | bureau also _ were) — announced. Officers their new ranks are: Capt. Oliver H. Lemeaux, in: ‘d that her husband was a charge of the Administration bu-| » Lt. Clayton A. Randolph, of the Vice Squad; Lt. Charles W Gale, who will conleus as head, of the Identification bureau, Lt. Claude A. Evans, super- | viser of the traffic violations and driver licensing office: Lt. Harry E. Nye, promoted to Chief Com- munications officer; Det. Robert _M. Wachal, who will join the De- | fective bureau; and Patrolman (Continued on Page 2, Col, 5) v and! : ers yesterday received pro- motions and acting ranks of two other officers were for: confirmed. ae by Police Chief Her- LEXINGTON, Va. (AP) - a fiheral service will be held to- - a RAMEE Nesp ee he “Fst fo Repair - Flooded Alleys “Some, County Roads, Still Are Treacherous, Kingswood ‘Sets | Summer School’ fz | for First Time~ Kingswoed School Cranbrook will, inaugurate an academic summer | Session this year. for the first time) lin history beginning in June; Classes start June 18 and will con-) ‘tered and he skipped whole para- *&#st After Flood Waters 5 | scp, Galea le Temple | in include art history story, were making plans to repair their | ctassics, English, French, and: flooded bowling alleys as fair social studies. Since courses are weather hit the Pontiac area today. non-credit, there will be no forma! An Elks spokesman said the new ‘examinations given. rece Pn .»| All registrations must be com- aleyn en tS Comase, pleted by June 11 for these ses- when the basement of the building isions. All students who will have .was flooded in the heavy rains last completed the 10th, Ith, or 12th | deus for six weeks\for bdth boys) jand girls. ‘weekend. He expressed the belief grades by June of 1956 are eligible, that they would be ready for use to enroll. Previous attendance at when re-sanded. ' Elsewhere around the Detroit quired to area, residents were hopeful con- courses. ~ tinued good weather would dry up| Classes will be held five morn the remaining water from the mil-.ings each week with students al- lion-dollar flood. lowed to take one or two courses, ; ; _ Three guest teachers will team The gg Odor Selintind jwith members of the regular patiallgrcon) es Police have re- Kingswood faculty in conducting ia is til ore ‘the instructions. The summer ses- ‘sion will be directed by Mrs. Cyril ‘soggy and treacherous, i Player. Over 30,000 persons relying on 5 wells for:water are being warned against possible contamination. They are being advised to take precautions until drinking water i tested. Flooding near wells ae e eause pollutiom, according to “in Health arclires roaligrany men, Householders in such are Dpbamery to bring well saiioles? tol the Health group for analysis and) take the = six-week Graham Trial Scientist Will Testify disinfect the wells before drinking. on Bomb Used to Blast After expected approval by the Flooded basements should washed and disinfected as high up as waters. reached, said the Health Department. ; Calories Fine— — but How About ™. the Food’s Taste WASHINGTON w — WAC offi-; cers wish they could find a way! Dist. Atty. Bert Keating said Dr. to keep women soldiers with)J William Magee of Washington, ie problems away from snack/D.C., would “tie together and ex: | plain’? bits of metal and carbon! nd ke a identified previously by FBI and/ Tt isn’t the regular.menu that United Air Lines witnesses as be-| gives the girls thouble, Col. Irene, \ing foreign to aircraft. O. Gagloway, Women's Army) . Corps commandant, told the FRAGMENTS FOUND House Appropriations, Committee! The state witnesses said the recently. fragments were found in the shat-| “The women who abe g - tered remains of a DC6B that ex-| weight will go to the snack "| ploded last Nov. 1 near Longmont | Col. Galloway said during ieee ‘Colo., 11 minutes after taking off mony made pebtic today. from Denver. | Graham is charged in the death She deiatand het ores atten- ee his mother Mrs. Daisie E. King, tion is paid to the caloric con- one of the 44 passéngers. He's tent, of food served at regular eet of stuffing a dynamite! meals (the men get 3,600 calories|time bomb in ost luggage. daily and the girls 2.400). But she * added that ‘regardless of what! Magee, ecient cflet of phys-| food you get in the mess .. . they ics and chemistry at the FBI lab-! will still go to the snack bars.’ , oratory in Washington, testified “It is a matter of discipline,” previously that he found traces of she said somewhat ruefully. exploded dynamite »n metal frag- iments. of Cargo Pit No. 4, where Scribe Recalls Veep - — reen Berets! at Two Conventions Army May Issue (Continued From Page One) of the speaker. The newspapermen Them to Tr OOps WASHINGTON uw — The Army all had copies of the speech and we followed him in the text. But toward the last he appeared | thinking of outfitting its troops: faint, his massive frame shook, with berets but the idea al-’ his great voice quivered, he fal- C@dY has one Congress member Fated Airliner i” DENVER (®—A top FBI physi- | |cist was called today to give weet the Protectan, calls “key testi-| in the murder trial of John iblowing up an airliner carrying 44 people, e 6 * * * — Meare nike aa ai told the House Appropriations in the middle of a sentence. Committee, in testimony made * » * public today, that the Army has His much younger wife to whom Under study” proposals to out- he had been married three years {it all troops in. green berets Rep. Flood (D-Pa) said he before sat in the front row in the balcony just above the press sec- thought berets might be good mo- “tion. She became greatly alarmed rale builders for special units like “but not GI berets Army.” * * when he faltered, bit her tips and peratmwone's, hid her face in her hands.. ke thet iw hole She joined him on the stage fol the ovation which was louder and longer than any other in the en- tire convention, not excepting that for Stevenson after his nom- ination and that for President Truman. | tried to time it — but it stopped my watch. Barkley had a soft spot in his big heart for Pontiac. His first remark when I was introduced to him was, ‘You've alwayS made a good car:’ We discovered we were approxi é : ress See ec neice ities fie tution of the $1,283.33 in’ dues of out as “that boy,”’ saying that we the Pontiac Matrons’ Club which were so young that we both, still she padmtics converting (o her own had a to learn. “T think it is fine to have a hot-shot outfit . . . wearing it, but I will have something to say be- fore they break out the Army in berets,” Flood deciraed. 3-Year Probation Given Mary Hargo Mary Hargo, 39, of 289 W. Wilson St. was sentenced yesterday to| three years’ probation and resti- he Hargo, former treasurer of ne the club, was sentenced by Oak- The Weat er land County Circuit Judge Frank Fall US. Weather Bureau Report L. Doty. She pleaded guilty to the PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly i. Aoril 18 cloudy and net much change in tem- (24TEC Apri Lt perature today tonight and tomorrow As treasurer, Mrs. Hargo re- Chance of scattered light frost tonight : oe High today 52-56 Lew tonight 36-0 portediy kept a false bankbook to show members records of dues deposits: she had not made and high fomersew) 4-58.» Today fis Pontiac Lowest temperature preveciig’ 8 *®™ The shortage in club fands*was At @ am” Wind vweoity ¢ mph discovered, members told police, Direction: Northeast. Sun sets Tuesday at 771 1 Sun rises Wednesday at 4 26 am Moon sets Tuesday a! 10 i272 an Moon rises Wedriéaday at 1 05 am last December when withdrawals fron the bank for donation to charities were planned. At that time, ~ Towntown Temperatures 66. M0. 52 Hargo disappeared, after a fire of os mi... pS Gon - ?, unknown origin had slightly dain- e@Ueece) 42 em) Fee. ! Sa.m. 46 aged her hous 10s. m. 50 oe , Monday ‘in Pontiac {As Trecorded downtown) Town Cleree Shop— ; Highest . temperature « Takes Off for Fishing SEYMOUR, Tex P—Just as it has done for the past 29 years, Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather—Pair. One Year “Age. in Pontiac gp very choo osintinald : so Seymour closed up todaylock, ~~ peters teen etee %4 stock and barrel—to go fishing. : ne “Gone fishing” signs -were Wishest ind Lowest Temperatures THis’ placed in all store windows of this Date in 4 Years #7 im 1942 28 in 1903 northwest Texas town of 3.779 pop- Monday's Tanperetere Chart julation as the annual May | Fish 2 < Mian wad My = Day .was observed ann } 2 33 $2 35, .*, * 4} # Rew York. 72 45) .By proclamation of ‘the mayor, nastt $8 38 Phoentx ( 2 8 everyone was urged to take the ¥ * Le —- a4 | day off and head for Lake Kemp, 46 28 S/S. Mariee 51 31,Rine miles away, where the Cham- I S 79 poor | 43 ber of Commerce has posted $100 op Be 6 68 jin fishing and boat race prizes. {, &- . Y “= * The summer school curriculum! the | Kingswood or Cranbreok is not re-! pro (by William B they said, Mrs from the boy River, - FINAL NATIONAL ANTHEM — With closed eyes Sen. Alben W. Barkley stands as is sung to open yesterday's— mock political convention ae easbing Oo and Lee Spangled Banner” rose ene 'é Eg “> AP Wirephoto University. The senator was making the keynote address later when he collapsed and died. At Barkley’s right is Mrs. Francis P. Gaines, wife of the university president, = Mrs. cantante “The Star 7 Bids on Parking Lot Bonds Police Appointments | * Bids on the $600,000 worth of | an agreement for water service for revenue bonds to finance the voter- fagi eekly meeting of the Pontiac City Commission. Co oy, Manager W. K.. The following items will be adced|! wise tonight's City Commission agen-| gide park to da as the result of action taken last} night by the commission at their! Physicist Called to Be Opened at Meeting Announced by Chief (Continued From Page One) the Ralson Equipment Co. | Robert W. Verhine, now Station | cing oan street parking proj-| Public hearings of intention to Armorer and firearms instructor, | Rapids, McBain, Scottsville, Ste- will be epened tonight at the construct the following — projects will be acted on: Lemeaux, 54, of 2445 Silver Cir- Sidewalk on the east side of Oneida cle Dr., was confirmed (ond, from. Menominee to Manitou for rank he has held since August joined the force July Sidewalk on the north side of Hazel last year. He pei Abo from Jessie to Belmont pam. “" Some nue from east line of lot 2 East Subdivision to Seward and fed Russell street to the east line loty of the subdivision, "rede and graveling om Joslyn avenue! : jextended from Perry street to Linda i’ informal meeting: Vista avenue and on Linda Vista fiom a 1 City Attorney to prepare’? ppl extended east approximately 307 |Gilbert Graham, 24, accused ofjcharter amendments for vote on|"* Hearings will also be conducted residence rule and sup- fire-police jplementing city pension plan with, concerning public ! Social Security. 2 — Formal! approval of Pontiac) |General Hospital budget. — Approval of lease for U.S. Any Training Center 4 — City Attorney to prepare = ‘ordinance authorizing pay raise for’ Municipal Court jurors Willman ‘said money should. ite available in about four weeks. “We will begin working on cer- tain phases of the project right away,” he added. Other items on the 26-point slate! ‘include action on 17 public - im-| provement projects. Other business to be acted on by the commissioners includes a laced from Adolph and Helen Hohm. for a part of lots 18 and 25 in Mt.’ | Clemens Hills. Expected to be accepted also will be four right-of-way agree- ments necessary in a storm drain t. A resolution authorizing the city | \clerk to advertise for recapping) Mrs King's luggage was placed.'State street between Huron “and | Johnson. and Osmun street ‘tween Saginaw and Sanford, scheduled to be acted on tonight. City Atterney William A Ewart will present two reports | on negotiations for two lots in the city. The commission will act on an Member Is Added . to UF Committee Whitfield, has been appointed >) Falysis—on any subsequent ex- Mrs. Stuart Cherokee Rd. to the Public Relations Advisory Committee of the Pontiac Area United Fund. The appointment was announced Hartman, president of the fund Mrs. Whitfield has served on the United Fund budget hearing panels for the past three years Other members of the committer which will advise the United Fund in the formation of its promotion ae education program are: Robert Emerick, chairman, John Fitz- ie rald, B. W. Crandell, Fred ‘Haggard. John Hirlinger, Larry Payne, Ray. Ulseth, John Vivian, and Miss Mary Eifen Wyngarden. The group is scheduled to mect May 11 at the Waldron Hotel. fee Birmingham Student Held in Shooting JACKSON « — A Birmingham student at Spring Arbor Junior College was being held: by police today for investigation in the shoot- ing of the 10-year-old son of former college president Dr,.C. D. Moon Police. said Eddie Moon was playing outside Norman Schrott’s dormitory when he was shot Sun- day, Schrott, 18, of Birmingham, told police he was about &) feet in his second floor dormitory room. He said he point- ed his .22 caliber rifle at the child's back and pulled the trigger. Schrott said he did not know the gun was loaded, The Moon boy was reported in fair céndition at University Hospital, Ann Arbor, He was reported paralyzed temporarily with a*bullet in his spine. Schrott was held without charge at the Jackson County Jail. Eddie's father resigned last Srp- tember as president of the small Free Methodist college eight miles lice Department is recruiting 25 ley, said. Det. Johnston will have said no word had been received senger operations since World War west of Jackson. He now teaches at Hillsdale but lives in Spring Arbor, There are seven locks on the St. Clair searches. They'll look for chew, but its jaws have sharp, ‘night. The girls had told some per cent hike effective on travel, IHinois Waterway, which links Lake Michigah with the Mississippi |sunken cars and trace undetwater off bites of food, which are then run away from home, according Minnesota, ' jerime clues, a » of 286 six special assessment rolls improvement nd east 40 feet of lot 103 1 herve rom the south side of Auburn) NESBITT RANDOLPH ork. rei rolis prepared by the city : assessor are expected to be ac- 1, 1925, became a detective in 1927 cepted by the commisison in final and was promoted to sergéant in ‘action, 1932. Lemeaux was appointed lieu- tenant April 10, 1951 Also confirmed in a rank held | since August was Randolph, 44, of 1065 Argyle Ave. He joined the ferce April 6, 1937 and was Salk Vaccine Wont Wear Out Polio Serum Discoverer Says Inoculation Facts Indicate Immunity a three-weeks course at North- western University Traffic In- stitute in Chicago, Il. Nesbitt, 39, of 128 Whittemore St. has been in charge of the Vice | Squad since last August. He be- came a patrolman Oct. 16, 1942 J. «INS) — and was appointed sergeant May ATLANTIC CITY, N - Bell Borrowing. “Approval Asked in the appointed sergeant Sept. 24, 1950. | Randolph is presently attending | ? —1— ; a ' a J pre “Up : . nt \ oe : vi f 2 t ce ’) ft a : 7 : \ pe i cs ~ a ‘ j THE, PONTIAC PRESS URSDAY. MAY ¢1es0 oe . The Day in Birmingham $30 Million Debenture| BIRMINGHAM~A\ public meet- : q'ing to héar state officials discuss wow Help eine savaniaes of fludridatidn of city 1g xpansion Ove water supplies is being planned by city Commissioners. The commission proposes to de- cide for or against fluoridation jafter the meeting. Commissioners last night heard ‘two state health department of- ficials explain success in reducing dental caries in children in Grand Rapids, where fluorides have been added to water supplies for ten years, Dr. Fred Wertheimer, chief of the state department's dentistry section, sald the department en- dorses fluoridation for water not containing enough natural LANSING (#—The Michigan Bell Telephone Co, asked state permis- sion today to borrow 30 million dollars’ to help finance a $332,594,- 000 expansion program over the next three years. The expansion program was some 135 million dollars bigger | than the expansion program for the last three calendar years. The company petitioned the State Public Service Commissioner for authority to issue 30 million dol- lars worth of 40-year debentures. Bell officials say the mammoth Reortde. oO construction program, to be com-| Birmingham's water supply’ con-, pleted by 1960, will include in-\tains some, but not enough flu- stallation of 421,000 new phones and Oride, he says. ~ allow completion of a new plant} Commissioners are delaying their jin Ypsilanti. vote until the public can be more The three-year program will also|fully advised of the process., Ad- see. conversion of the. last ‘hand. dition of fluorides would probably cranked telephones operated by the wait for the filtration plant being), company in Michigan to dial sys-/talked of for the city’s water items. system. | Hand cranked, or magneto type| At present, adding water to lequipment, is still in use in Elk) each of the seven wells would be costly. However, after July the city water is to be supplemented by 50 per cent Detroit water, and mixed with that _™pply in . a central plant, A public vote not necessary, al- though citizens of Pontiac and other cities have voted. Pontiac \Fejected fluoridation,in April, 1955, jafter citizens petitioned for a ref- erendum, | Two paving projects were ap- }nance the expanaifa program. proved last night, with the Eton street width set at 33 feet, and Pontiac Deaths ithe Holland Avenue, width at 25 23 \feet. Mrs. Orval Cook | Holland, being paved trom Eton Mrs. Orval (Cora Luvica) Cook, street west, does not need a park-| 79, of 3133 Hazelmary Ave. died ing’ lane with only five commer- in Pontiac General Hospital yes. cial firms owning property, rep- terday after several years’ illness. Tesentatives of the firms said. Their She was born in Waverly, Iowa !rucks could operate better with- Aug. 24, 1876. the daughter of Out parking there, they added. {Eugene and Mary Wade Turner’ A petition for a patrolman: at and married here Oct. 23, 1933. | Oakland and Hunter was present- Mrs. Cook was a member of ¢d by parents of school chil-, the Collier Road Community rea who use the crossing. The Church and had lived in the Pontiac area most of her life. She leaves her husband; two sons, Raymond J. of Pontiac, Robert K. of Lake Orion and Pokal grandchildren; a sister, Violet I. Cole; two brothers, Dwient of Pontiac and Gilbert of Davis- |phenson, Gagetown, Marion, Men- ton and Unionville. About 5,000 hand-cranked tele- phones in those communities will be converted to dial phones by 1960 jthe commission said. | The commission previously au- thorized the company to issue 117 million dollars in stock to. help fi- underground tunnel! is used by Snow Fails fo Stop «Intrepid Trouters Dr, Jonas Salk said today he has —» ‘burg. (Continued From Page One) convincing new evidence that polio Service will be at 2 p.. m : protection from Salk vaccine won't Wednesday from the Voorhees- eta poe as saapell wear out —_perhaps not even in j Siple Chapel with her pastor, the, getting gum bisened ia the mow cen.’ > > | ee ; ting P /a lifetime. | ™F- t 9 |Rev. RB. Pawley. officiating.' vith hover-flies and a stray mos. The new evidence suggests, the’ Pittsburgh scientist said, that to- _ day's vaccinated children may have _'prolonged or even life-kng immu- nity against the great crippler’s |paralytic effect. : EVANS GALE 22, 1951 He also is in charge of lhquer hcense inspection and en- forceme - Gale, 41, of 185 Naver Dr , has been in ences of. the Identification .bureau since his promotion to ser- geant Nov. 2. 1952. He joined the force April 6, 1937 and was ap- pointed a detective June 10, 1946. Evans, 50, of 179 N. Opdyke Rd. joined the force Nov 3, 1927. He was appointed detective sergeant He sald his ‘new discoveries in- dicate that Salk vaccine inocu- lation sets up defenses that can literally beat pollo to the punch —and stop it from causing pa- (ae to the disease. The youthful varus expert an ee his findings at the an- nual convention of hhe Association jof American Physicians. | (Coe \ + Bunal wil follow in the Davisburg quito or two to add to the fun. [Psacbesy off im the morning. nstream from the M10 dam. ven ‘Karl Tellchow: | Watched an expert aymph flsher. Mrs. Karl (Ada A.) Tellschow,) man take a pair of ten inch 78, of 63 Kimball Nt. died yester-- browns and then a nearby fac- day afternoon in Pontiac General tery started its infernal ma- Hospital. She had been ill four chinery, raising the water level months , and flow very rapidly. She was born in Warreg Ton: NORTH BRANCH GOOD ship Sept. 2, 1878, the daughter of We Giant mak ffort Warren and Sarah Button James. Tan itnatimesn cireuta Avs oe te he es hows were married here have time to replenish itself. Up-| stream from M10 the Henry Mc- Coming to Pontiac from Roch- Nalleys of Rochester were taking ester 55 years ago, Mrs, Tell- a foll. Further upstream, City schow had been »mployed in the Manager “‘Bill’’ Willman Was flail- sewing room at Fisher Body Di- ing the stream with deadly intent Scienti ers: = ah. : con a qe ieee ientific observers said the af- in 1932. He will continue as super- Tinton and results. Further up the Ben nouncement probably means adults yisory officer of the Traffic Vio- Jeromes were hatching sinister may never need “‘booster” shots Jations and Driving Licensing Besides her, husband) shes jar: plans against th ain st lof Salk vaccine to maintain im- office vived by a daughter, Mrs. aad & e main stream’s| ntunity against paralytic polio Ley oe : The evidence also might mean _ New Chief Communications of- the ideal polio vaccine already is leer, Nye, 39, of 754 Lounsbury at hand, in the form of the Salk Axe: became a patrolman March 29, | killed-virus vaccine. - 1942. He was promoted to the of communications for the fire | department and other cily serv- . will specialize in detection of DETROIT « — Mayor Albert forged checks. He became a pa- announcement on whether he will be a Republican candidate for gov! ment ‘have until Thursday to col- let a lawrequired minimum of GOP ballot. While he once dechned fo run, _ aoe of sergeant as of Jan. 5, Wi l C b Ry rR ? 1953. He also will be in charge ice departments. Wachal, of 15 Edison Ave. Cobo is due home tomorrow and with him he may bring an ernor, Leaders of a “Draft Cobo” move 11,000 signatures to qualify the three-time mayor for a spot on the Cobo said he would “wait and see’ when a draft movement was oo NYE WACHAL trolman Nov. 1, 1950 and since then has spent three vears in military Zola Warner of Pontiac, one grand- child and one great-grandchild. On the North Branch we Other survivors include one dropped in on the Lynn Allens brother, Lafayette James of Flor-| and learned that fishing there ‘ida; three sisters, Mrs. Nellie Dun- had been pretty good right from gerow of Rochester, Mrs. Pauline, the start. Lynn, of course, knows ‘Dunning of Detroit"and Mrs. Jean that stream like a book and Arnston of Big Beaver. | whether or not it was because of ' Service will be held at 1:30 p.m. this, he and his week-end guests, Thursday from the Huntoon Fu- the Harold Smeeds, Leo Donald- neral Home with the Rev. Myron sons and Eimer Horns came up R. Everett of the Baldwin Avenue) with some very respectable trout. United Evangelical Church offici-| ating. Burial will be in Avon Ceme- tery, Rochest(. Except for water temperatures, streams in the Au Sable system ‘are in very fishable shape. North, |Branch is normal and clear. Main ‘Stream and South Branch near. Woods, normal for this season, a trifle dark. Another couple days of warm sunshine and these waters should provide some top-notch. activity. By next weekend, barring further: snow or con rain. Railroads Hike Rates Mrs. James “Woods. Mrs. James (Blanche) 77, of 14 Spokané Dr. died yester- day afternoon in St. Joseph Mercy, Hospital. aa had been ill one day. Born Dec. 7, 1876 in Barrie, Ont. Canada, er was the daughter of, Samuel and Susan McKernon Moo-| ney Mrs. Woods was a resident of | launched recently by John Fei- service Pontiac 15 years, She came here kins, chairman of the Republican *©'*'C® ; { P T State Central Commies sae at Verhine, 29. of 184 W. Long from Newberry. She was a mem. Or assenger rave ford O'Sullivan: Repuniican nation. (¢llew Ave will continue in the ber of St. Mary's Guild and th al Pamimlicenan : rank of patrol- Altar Seciety of St. Benedict's s WASHINGTON um — Eastern and © ae min but gain Catholic Church. Western railroads raised their; _ . | additional payin oe . | basic passenger fares by 5 per! Demands Examination i his new position Sng leaves a daughter, Mrsavel ‘cent today. | ; ter Shoup, with whom she made, He has been in oe a on Assault Charge «i charge of the Joe = Gibson" 5. oF 229 F police pistol Walton Blvd... is being he ral Oak- range since July land Count} Jail under $1000 bond ‘last year. Ver- on a felonious assault charge. He hine joined the demanded examination when ar- department Nov. raigned by Justice Willis D. Lefur VERHINE 1, 1950 gy of Waterford Township Monday. Straley also announced the re- Gibson was arrested by State Po- assignment of detectives Herbert lice April 28 in Whrertord Town- W. Cooley and Orville O. Joppston. ship after allegedly threatening Al- from the Vice Squad. Another de- bert Smith of that township with a tective, James J. -Laponste, was knife and demanding aid in getting re-assigned to duties with the his car off the road. = squad. —————— Cooley and Det. James J. Bale were assigned to work as a sec- ond team in the investigation of Po- breaking and entering cases, Stra- Detroit Skin Oven DETROIT («®—The Detroit be general assignment duties in the Detective Burgaw: he_ added. skin divers. Recruits will formed into -a new ‘‘frogman” junit to help the Harbormaster’s Bureau in Detroit River and Lake A tania’ Me toothings. cannot ‘drowning victims, investigate horny edges. Their closing shear's | sw allows d whole: ie her home; two grandchildren, five| great-grandchildren and a_ sister,' Mrs. Minnie Sutton of Linden,. | The Rosary will be recited at| 8 o'clock ‘Wednesday évening in the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. | The funeral service will be at 9) a.m. Thursday from St. Michael's’ Catholic Church with burial in’ Newberry. There was.a simutfaneous 7'3) per cent hike in Pullman charges| ‘throughout the country. | The Southern railroads ‘are scheduled to make a similar 5 per jcent increase in their basic pas-| 'senger fares effective May 15. The Interstate Commerce Com-| ;mission late yesterday approved ‘the increase in interstate pas- senger rates west of the Missis- 'sippi River and north of the Ohio land Potomac rivers, plus West | Virginia and | most of Virginia. Two Pontiac Girls Missing From Homes Two Pontiac girls have been) missing from their homies’ since g, The em said multimil- p.m. Monday. city police said to- | lion-dollar deficits which the rail- day. One of the parents contacted| roads ‘have been incurring in pas- from the teenagers. }II demonstrated a need for addi- Carol Graham, 16, of W. Wilson| tional revenue. Ave., and Jane Bannon, 15, were} The ICC also authorized the | reported to have left the city last ‘railroads, yesterday to make the 5, younger children they planned to| within Arkansas, Towa, Michigan, | stop light is not enough and the | City Plans Public. Meeting — to Discuss Fluoridation — 50 per cent of the — dren, they said. Front of the Municipal Building and surrounding grounds will be tirst step of the remodeling planned there: by city commis- sioners, Approved last night. was a new walkway, at a cost of $1,200 and a new hand rail up the steps, for $350. Ordinances for motor buses and jswimming pools were tabled un- |til next week as they came before jcommissioners at 11:15 p.m. After referring the recreation depart- ment’s budget to the city man- ager and deciding the proposed anti-litter ordinance was not en- torceable, commissioners ad- journed at 11:30, * * s The city's new assessor, Clark Hagstrom, began work today. He |comes ‘trom Ironwood, and will be advised in his new work by Elmer Haack, retiring assessor. * * President A. Edward Moilanen,- of L'Anse will exchange places lwith Mayor James Allen on May 21 as part of Michigan Week ob- servance. Mayor Allen will visit L’Anse in the Upper Peninsula. Sen. Barkley Dies While Making Talk (Continued From Page One) Harrison (D-Va) also rushed for- ward. Calls were made for doctors and ambulances but the Rt. Rev. John J. Gravatt, Episcopal bishop of South Carolina, who: had delivered the invocation, said la- ter he believed the former ‘‘Veep" was already dead. CONVENTION OVER | The convention recessed but Ia- ter was called off indefinitely. The students dispersed quietly and the senator's body was removed on a stretcher. * * * Until his collapse he apparently had been in fine spirits as -he played again a part he almost owned—keynoting a Democratic convention. His speech was the. real Bark- ley — sprinkled with quips, praise . for the Democrats and artful digs at Republicans past and present. was all extemporaneotuis. He had spoken for about 20 minutes in the hot, stuffy gymnasium when he collapsed, toppling a micro Lets as pee fell * * Barkley came to Washington 34 years ago aS a member of the House of Representatives. Later he was elected to the Senate, jwhere he became majority leader. He resigned his Senate seat in |1949 to take office as vice: presi- dent. He tried briefly for the pres- idential nomination of his party in 1952 but failed, then ran for the Senate and was elected. IKE'S MESSAGE His death brought expressions of grief from President Eisenhow- er and al) of both parties, LJ Eisenhower ae zit nation is poorer’ for his death: “As vice president of the United States, member of Congress and senator from Kentucky, Mr. Barkley had a long and distinguished record of public service for the people of his state and country.” Vice President Nixon said Bark- ley ‘‘was loved and respected by ‘those who were privileged to know him, regardless of their partisan affiliations. He was, and always will remain in the hearts of the American people, the one and only Veep.” | *. * @ + | | Mrs, Barkley, his second wife, whom he married in 1949, was driven to ‘Washington last night by a state trooper with Mrs. Fran- cis P. Gaines, wife of the Washing- ton and Lee president, as her companion. ‘ALSO SURVIVING Survjving also are a son, David Murrell Barkley of Paducah, Ky., and two daughters, Mrs. Douglas MacArthur II and Mrs. Max O'Rell Truitt, both ot Washine co. In ee ys some form of political chaos was brewing today ‘over who will succeed Mr. Bark- ley in the us Bees * Gov, A. B. Ghani jis empow- ered by law to appoint a succes- r to serve until another senator can be elected in November. thru Sot Mon DARRELL'S DRUG STORE 37-39 S. Saginaw FE 5-452) Montana, Nebraska, t ito investigators. North Dakots and Texas. * I Oskiand Theater Bid dg. t gation. concealed in the hair — worn on dalam —~ as jewelry or a tie- pay @ con plete range of prices THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1956 ie Biss « Live A gain HEARING AGAIN Yes - ifs treely You can hear By JAMES MARLOW what "ment Acousti-|friends and foes ailike. con's scientilic fitting of your ~ Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON ?. — Sen. Alben ferred catered to the fact — von.\W: Barkley—a man of humor, bal.,that he was © more WON-| sie and kindliness—was one of from Kentucky, secid — those politicians who is widely be- bh eee loved in his lifetime by his political the junior senator He. had been senior senator for. years but lost seniority when he gave up his Senate seat to be vice president from 1949 to 1953. When But when yn etek was the re-elected senator in 1954, he be- hearing loss last thing he said—that he was came junior to Kentucky’s Sen. §, W. Williamson will open a new content to accept a ‘‘seat in the | Earle C, Clements, who was elect- Acoustician life fer you. Prove it to yourself without obli- expressing a thought that Acousticon Hearing Aids can be him by his age—78. WANTED MORE Choose from six models back seat. A Free Trial to Judge Results 1} Year Guarantee—Time Payments Come In or Phone for App't in Your Home or Our Office knows how long he had it. FITZPATRICK S |. oie oc on eluded him. PE 3-7171| Yesterday, 33 W. Huren He wanted the presidency, But, PHARMACY—2 STORES when at last he reached out, FE 2-8383 reviewing his career _ 302 State Bk. Bidg.'in an address at a student's mock Tee) ASS = back row” of political life, he was ed in 1950. had HOPED BRIEFLY: come to him late in life. He was accepting a reality forced upon | But less than four year's ago, at the 1952 Democratic convention in | Chicago, he hoped briefly his par- ity might nominate him for the He had wanted more than a Presidency, He had been one of the great public servants of his’ time. He had been in Congress al- Convention's opening day, organ- most continuously since 1913, And !zed labor leaders whom he had he had a dream. Perhaps he alone |Senerally supported all through * * He was disillusioned fast. On the | the Roosevelt and Truman admin- ‘istrations, refused to consider him, ‘Too old, they said. He was 74 then, and he felt ‘fine, ;as he did most of his life. He was ‘a vigorous man who had remar- ried at 71, a politician in the clas- jand witty. Not long ago he said ‘he had never had a headache in FAY’S HARDWARE IT’S HERE! IT’S AMAZING! “Power Handle” drives a whole family of yard machines 7495 10995 7955 $6996 9995 Electric Starting Available on Most Toro Mowers TERMS ARRANGED ON ALL ITEMS Open Sun. Open Sun. 9 to 1 9 to 1 HARDWARE and SPORTING GOODS 906 W. Huron St. Phone FE 5-8389 ‘his life. i * * * He was reportedly deeply hurt ‘when the union leaders rejected -him. If he had refused to face it within himself, he had to face it now: even his friends thought he was too old for the presidency. ‘HIGH POINT OF LIFE | But out of his disappointment, hno matter how bitter, he rose to ‘what became perhaps the high point of his ee * * Two. days tater! in the summer- boiting~ convention hall where the Democratic party had been almost | - torn dpart in angry, factional dis- unity. The ovation when he finished ished, standing alone, white-haired in the blinding spotlights, the jam- packed delegates leaped to their! \feet and cheered. i * * . | They were cheering more than} just a man who had made a good political talk. They were trying to Detectives Probing Hardware Breakin graph Road hardware store in which merchandise valued at about $5,000 was taken. remember to attend the church of your choice Hinton 79 OAKLAND AVE. We are members of National Selected Mortictans, an association of funeral directors of high fdeals, ethical practices and business integrity 40 fishing reels had been stolen as The breakin was discovered lace Simmons. of the Bloomfield Township build- next few months. emocratic convention’ at Wash- faithful service to his country and ington and Lee University, he re- his party. pute, Barkley went before the dele- gates with a rousing speech for ems ressing 'may have been one of the longest | /in convention history. As he fin-| arm | 0 ry /tell him, it seemed, that they loved|pressed today for an early House and cherished him for his long and| vote on a new compromise farm a == —=' | bill. a meeting on the request of Rep. Cooley (D-NC) that it clear the bill for floor debate as soon as possible, | Cooley is chairman of the - | Oakland County Sheriff's detec-| culture Committee, w Ae tives were seeking leads today in-| Be cS te to the weekend breakin of a Tele- beeen approved a yester- largely to meet objections Presi- jdent Eisenhower voiced two weeks] Store owner Keith Anderson re-\ago when he vetoed the farm ball ‘vealed yesterday that 22 guns and Congress had well ag various other fishing equip- ment, two clocks and a typewriter. Messe paueacraaat Sunday morning by manager Wal-/|for Eisenhower's soil bank, con- Entry was gained|templating payments to farmers by making a hole in the rear wall|who retire some of their acreage from production of crops now i ing. + surplus. give Eisenhower the Twenty thousand Norwegian permission to make advance pay- males who will be 19 this year will | jments of as much as 500 million report for military service in the dollars this year to farmers who agree to take part. iu as ast they were ying to ROMANCE FOR THE VEEP — Sen. Alben W. Barkley, who collapsed and died Monday after- noon at Lexington, Va., and his bride, the former Mrs. os Ss. Hadley. are eee as } they pre- wash away ‘in the sea, of their ap- plause whatever hurt he may have felt at being rejected when he had bong. eae of Presidency 1 Eluded Alben “Barkley ual reached out for the highest office |the significance ‘of that cy end-/Sale of cars, trucks, and buses less applause. As it turned out, he| War I period just before Wor: the voters could give. AP Wirephete pared to cut wedding cake following their mar- riage in, St. Louis, Mo., in November of 1549, when Barkley was vice president of the United States. : Early Action in House Urged for Compromise Legislation WASHINGTON ( —Democrats The Rules Committee scheduled perhaps, tomorrow. which unani- Cooley tailored the measure Gone from the new “yun is a pro- vices, Cooley's bill includes provision bill would not requeste But the to mourn the death of the Veep— Sen. Alben W. Barkley of Ken-| tucky. Former President Truman. told x an audience: the Senate. “He was one of the greatest | vice presidents that ever occu- | pied that chair. - Peo a cae Hoblmank Mother ys ue aunt grandmother mother-to-be mother of a friend one who has been like a mother to me Each one created in the fine tradition of Hallmark Cards bers of the House and all of their | wives and friends—their shortcom- | ings and their qualities.” ” * * Barkley was vice president dur-| ing Truman's 1949-1953 term. Pre viously, they had served in the! Senate together. ‘FAITHFUL FRIEND’ “George Meany, president of the, AFL-CIO, called Barkley ‘‘a faith- ful friend of labor throughout his long career in the publie service.” * * & Senate Democratic Leader Lyn-. don B. Johnson of Texas termed Barkley's death ‘‘a terrible loss for millions of Americans."’- Senate Republican Leader country and Kentucky “have lost ator."’ .Seaside, Ore., to Barkley's~*’cour- t Dems, GOP Close Ranks to Pay Tribute to Barkley WASHINGTON (7 — US. lead-,tesy, kindness and gallantry” al ers laid partisanship aside today | said, deed." ‘best of the qualities we seek in our “I knew him before he went to national leaders " ‘PERSONAL LOss’ recalled that Barkley and he en- itered the House on the same day “The reason was that he knew in 1913, adding: all of the senators, all of the mem- very great personal loss to: imé.’ Paul M. Butler spoke of Barkley's death as | Leonard W. | Barkley: | Was a great American.” today that of its wisest statesmen." “great shock" and added: ohe of the great men of the nation Hle had many friends, not Umited by party affiliation, and the Senate ! ‘will be a different place without Knowland of California said the pjim” a great citizen and a great sen- ,. “This is a very sad day in- * * Ld Sen. Estes Kefauver of Tennes- ee said Barkley personified ‘‘the House Speaker Rayburn (D-Tex.) “His death is a * * @ Democratic National Chairman “an immense loss.” Republican National Chairman Hall wired Mrs. “AN Américas shares your sorrow ,.. Alben Barkley Mennen Williams said “The nation has lost oné Gov. G. * * * Sen. Potter (R-Mich.) expressed “He was Sen, McNamara (D-Mich.) said: I was certainly saddened hy Sen . Barkley's,,passing. I lost a good} * Adlai Stevenson paid tribute: in'friend and the people of the coun- ry lost a great champion.” eee Optometrist | 7 North Saginaw } Phone FE 4-68 Open Friday Eveni ‘tBeuer Things im Sight” “DR. HENRY A. MILLER | Street 5 42 ngs _ MILLERS — 144. OAKLAND AVE, Adjustable Steel Hollywood | BED | FRAMES | on large 2-in. easy rolling casters Deluxe $13.95 Value Strong Steel Bed Frame Only pedis These strong metal bed frames may be attached to any headboard, or used without one. It floats the headboard legs slightly above the —- floor. The weight of the bed is evenly distributed and the frame legs on casters fit ‘underneath where they can’t be bumped into. Notice the long, graceful, round tapered legs that elevate your bed, giving you more than 8 inches clearance between bottom of your bed and the floor. . 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All the other politi- |||! cians, as if realizing that this hour belonged to Barkley alee, stayed away. know what to do with himself in this moment of joy, that he wan- dered around, reaching over the railing, and shaking hands ‘ with: newspapermen he didn't know. It ‘was the closest he could come to shaking hands with himself. | « He looked into the blinding lights, FLOWER and GARDEN SEEDS * « s He was so happy, so unable to) TASKER’S 63 West Huron FE 5-6261 SWEET P — | A.P’s OWN PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING , dexo ... the digestible all- purpose shortening .. . is ideal for cakes, fries end dexo 3°75 | 1b. can 29¢ EQUAL TO THE BEST-YET COSTS YOU LESS HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS Anacin or 30 49%... oo + eorse 69 Bromo Quinine sono an oun Tooth Powder accstlhn . 63 “48r 47e Four-Way Cold Tablets . . . 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TIN 69 PLUS 7e TAX A&P—OUR FINEST QUALITY Grapefruit Juice 2 “3 3% Tomato Juice ~» ...... ‘tan 27€ A&P Peaches somesms 3 cane 1.00 A&P Fancy Tuna wre mer, . Cin 29 r “SUPER-RIGHT” Luncheon Meat 4 cs 99¢ Whole Kernel Corn 4s . . cans 29€ Fancy Apple Sauce =» .. 4 Cans 47e Fruit Cocktail surana . . , 3 Cans 95¢ Eight O'Clock’ Coffee tao 79 oe eee BAG All prices in this ud effective thru Set., May Sth - SINCE 1E89 AMENICA'S FOREMOST FOOD BETANLER, . eee "Es a9 V5 Ste 78C. 1,20-02Z. JAR 63¢ e « PLUS é¢ TAX eee 7208 57. M AY 1. 1956 Tee THE, PONT AC PRESS. TU ES. ervice, Civic, a A number of groups in the Oak-)aje a John L. Peer of Walled, serve as president for the coming | Bull as senior vice commander; [fer of Metamora, secretary, and) On May. 9; the WSCS will spon- |». Jand-Lapéer County area have jLake, Mrs, Claude Sprunk of Green| year; “trs. J. L. Hamilton, vice | Donald’ Ross, junior vice com- ‘Lewis Utley:as treasurer, at a re- sor a Family Fellowship Pot) ‘The Boy ae ree Club has elections to. choose officers for the Ones Pe ae G., E. Bowles of preaidont i Mrs, Jay LaMor, | ergo AEH Seana ‘centr meeting in Clifford, . Luck Supper at the church. A a wi following — ne 1956-57 fiscal year, | = trae aa aateaaal jelane: | a 7" | Next meeting+will be held May| Mother-Daughter Banquet is being|Buh! Wiliams, ot cies al ‘den: Among organizations that apie ee The Pioneer Extension Club of) “’"~ iplanned for * ‘ay 26. zaines Greenhill, v presi F sree or installed officers . Almont Almont named” Mrs poe — x | for Bere Dengess) tr ween, Serres: ; sewn Installation of new officers Mrs. Raymond McCarty, treasur- church, home, service, veteran and Almont’s Home Study Club/Scully. chairman of its organiza. Mrs. Mildred Muckenheim was, ae ue | the Women’s auxiliary of VEW = " . | oe ome. elected Evelyn Wilson as its presi-|tion, Mrs, Alva Richards is vice Installed President of the women's, Meynbers of the WSCS of Trin- | Post 2706, Heart of the Lakes, Metamora = West Bloomfield Township — dent recently, with Mrs. Harold) chairman, and Mrs. Wendall Hay- age eral ity Methodist Church recently | was held recently at the me- | Trustees of the’ West Bloom- Walton and Mrs, Leonard Cohoon vice president; Eilene Ross, junior eiected Mrs, Sam Whitmore to | morial hall. : At the recent annua} meeting field Library elected jas first and second vice presidents werd, secretary treemirer vice president; Esther Prinnio, ive as president for the com. | ; ~ Pot the Me a Uniog Burial pre treasurer; and Mrs. Elizabeth Ken- | Mrs. Harry Fitzpatrick was in-| Ground all officers were Orchard Avon Townshi Mrs. Arthur Mowrey of Orc respectively. Mrs. Verne Messer = P ing year. |stalled as president, with Mrs. Bor-| re-elected. They aire: A. P. Stock- Church and Home Groups Elect Leaders en at the annual election of the Wesleyan Circle, WSCS: President, Mrs. Edith DeGrow; vice president Mrs: Olive Ball;' recording’ secre- tary, Mrs. Marguerite Sari; pro- motional secretary, Mrs. Anabelle Hutchinson; treasurer, Mrs. Lucille Mitchell. Troy Mrs. Evelyn. Short was elected president of the WSCS of Troy Methodist Church at a recent meet- 4 dall, secreta The Jack Mason Post'of the VFW ue | Mrs. Robert Zimmerman is the|is Chakroff and Mrs. Sherley Cur- and its auxiliary recently held a) Ciitterd lvice president; Mrs. Edward Col-irie as senior and junior vice presi- Joint installation program at Roch-' District 32 of the IOOF named ins, recording secretary: Mrs. Jo-! dents. jester. ‘Grant Travis of Clifford as its seph Fournier, promotion sec-| Mrs. Herold Schingeck is the Max Mati’ was’ sworn in as president; Eart Utley Jr. of Imlay retary; and Mrs. Ronald Fockler, itreasurer and Mrs. Luella Dale, commander # the pest; Donald IC ity, vice president; T. J. Van! treasurer. | secretary. Lake as president at a recent board meeting. Mrs. Richard Freund of Birming- ham is vice president and Mrs. Wendell Moore of Birmingham, secretary, Other board ‘members is seeretary and Mrs. Mitchell Cur- rey, treasurer, ‘Another Almont group to pick officers is the Women's Fellow- ship of the Congregational Chareh, Mr. Frask Trott wilt | er, president; Harry Best, vice president; Paul Groff, secretary; and Mrs. Hazel Ribble, treasurer. North Branch The towne officers” were chos-| ing. Other officers are vice president, Mrs. Barbara Schultz; recording secretary, Mrs. Laura Holloway; and treasurer, Mrs. Harriett Bar- nard. — _ Your PTA Is Planning: Concert Series | Roosevelt, S Campaign Starts Waterford Music rol Holds Kickoff to Bring) Top-Flight Artists | | KEEGO HARBOR — The Roose- velt PTA will meet tonight at 8, ‘in the gym. This is the final busi- | ness meeting of the 1955-56 sea- ison. All committee reports are| 'to be turned in at this time. Mrs. Charles Leaf will install the | WATERFORD TOWN SHIP —| With the aim of enlisting 1,000) _ : } people in the cause of good mu- new officers for the coming year. sic, the Waterford Township Civic The boys glee club from | Musie Association held its kickoff Eastern Juniof High School, Pon- dinner last night. tiac, will be on the program. —_ pe saneyaeaoltint All parents are cordially invited tt ey apt pistes ito attend. Fifth grade room moth-| - and strangers to sell mem ips da and meet the goal by 6 p.m. Satur- ers will be hostesses. day. South Lyon Membership in the music as- The final meeting of the Junior- sociation includes 9 season's |\Senior High PTA will be held in tickets to q series of concerts, lthe high school at 8 p.m., Monday pecans -to be presented at Crary Junior May 7. The program will consist High School this year. The “guar- \of a business*meeting with election | anteed audience pian” insures ‘of officers. raraar dpe alereany caewgady all An hour of entertainment will ee — poppin ae, follow which will include tumbling ” ret acts of girls and boys under the | Se ee direction of Mrs, Robert Hall, oe Lee Donley and Richard Sny- Martha Smith, representative of aor: Soon) al = ee eae Choral music will be directed by | night's affair She explained that Mrs. George Wilson, Instrumental . : a music will be presented by a por-| this means of bringing fine mu- : , tion of the high school band under| aic to many communities was = 2 ; . } started by the Civic Music Asso: . the direction of Frank Kochalko, ciation 32 years ago. : with readings by Mrs. John Holt's “Formerly a few wealthy pa- ‘ “~ = = English students. trons had been solicited to back rs Projects of the junior and senior each concert and then the artists va! - . we > -f Inigh school shope — home making, would perform to half-empty x — “Me 4. !general science and agriculture houses,” Miss Smith said, “Now, e wall be on display. | ee a better audience is _ , United Press Phota-| _ Marlette our FOR TREATING CANCER ~— A $300,000 radiation machine for treating cancer has of a lead- lined chamber. Above, machine is demonstrated with ‘ ‘patient’ seated in a | Ernest Superintendent of chair, holding her in line With powerful beam. Operator, outside of the room, is shield- | Midand Britt. will be speaker at ed by lead-glass. ‘the meeting ot the "Junior and Sen-| Congregational been put into operation at Stanford University Hospital, San Francisco. The machine, a 6,000,000 volt linear electron accelerator, weighs two tons and hangs from the SE ee May 12 Deadline Marlette Couple Married $5,000 Stolen speaker emphasized ne got corel will be accord Robert Withun, aetna sates 'Bonnabelle Scull G Blend somes ments arias ae |DONNADENC SCUNY in Lutheran Church Rite | OUD One| mission concerts » Married at Capac tr File Petitions Fr rom Church Detrox Meeting season membership only. ; ' MARLE TTE — An altar banked |flower girls—Linda Eastman, ‘ownship Supervisor Lloyd An- ALMONT—Bonnabelle K. Scully, | . ; : i Congregationalists from various ‘onan last night proctained An | tens of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton’ With xtediolt, SMuris, smn [a i Ble: and Karen Kratt: ie charchee a the area are planning | week as “Civic Music Week" in |W. Scully of Almont, and Robert!) WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — 4t Jubl Lutheran Church was the 7"! legroom's cousin Hazel Park Police Hunt to attend the spring meeting of! Thieves Who Broke Into the Congregational Association of | dames Cumper served his | | Detroit, to be held Sunday at First! | Calvary Baptist Office brother as best man, and attend- ants were Dale Lick and dames Boyne. Kenneth McLaren, John | Almas and Tom Lick seated the | guests, Waterford Township. The Rev. |R. Withum of Capac, spoke their Petitions for Board of Education scene for the wedding of Carolyn Fred R. Tiffany gave the invoca- "uPtal vows in a candlelight eve- nominees will be agcepted at the Eastman and William G. Crumper -tion for the dinner, and Harry|ing ceremony recently. The serv- school board offices until 4 pm. here recently. Nicholie and David Wilson, Crary ice was held before an altar deco- May 12, according to James Den- Carplyn is the daughter of Mr. 7 ~ Junior High School students, _pre- jrated with white giadieli mums Herder, assistant to the superinten- and Mrs. Roeland Eastman and sented three piano-bass viol Pas | jand snap dragons at the St. John dent of Waterford Township School William is the son of Mr. and Lutheran Church of Capac, District. Mrs. Dudley Crumper. Both are | The bride wore ai full length To qualify, the nominee must) from Marlette. Marc Kost of Romeo Wins Trip to Capita rear of slipper satin, with sweet.) have petitions signed by at least ay bride way dressed in a | ROMEO — Eleven-year-old Marc’ ‘Congregational Church, Woodward ‘and Forests Sts., Detroit. Registration will start at 3:30 |looking for thieves who stole more P-™.. with devotions and a business than $5,000 from the Calvary Bap- Session at 4 p.m., dinner at 6:30) tist Church Sunday night. and the Association Choir Festi- Burklars entered through a bath- “4! at 19. room window after breaking it For some time Congregational and forced open a door to the Christians Churches have been \church office at 24520 Stephenson’ individually studying a proposal |Hwy. Petty change and samps: to unite with the Evangelical and ‘were left behind. Reformed Church. | The thieves took all the money The decision on this issue is one | from the safe, which was found which each church must make for LAPEER — Service for Mrs. empty early Monday by care- itself, since the constitution of the) Henry F. (Angeline) Smith, 90, of *'*er Mes. Martha Stratton of Congregational Church gives each| ‘ ae | |. 1753 College St., Ferndale. -jchurch individual freedom. How- will be held at 2 ince. a resolution in regard to the, The money was raised by the the Muir rin to be church for a down payment on two Church union is ex] fed Sic with burial homes to be used as_living quaré-presented at the business session She dicd ters for missionaries on furloiigh, of the Detroit meeting ‘the Rev. David D. Allen told police. aa a Forming Lake Orion HAZEL PARK—Police are still Members of Jobs Daughters, with which the bride is affiliated, ‘yserved at the reception The newlyweds left for a trip through the southern states, after the reception. County Deaths. Mrs. Henry F. Smith Her veil of illusion was held by! -/ |a tiara of pearls and sequins, and she carried a white Bible with an arrangement of sweetheart roses and hyacinths. Maid of honor was Marilyn Fos-' 61 Cedar St., ter, and bridesmaids were Beverly p.m. Wednesday at and Nancy Jo Cumper, sisters of Brothers Funeral Home, James Krause served as best |Piring are Marshall FE. Smith and style dress featured a Peter Pan | ly in Washington, D. C. He will A family reception was held at - a march down Constitution avenue ¢™ Michigan, the newlyweds are Th d ursday . the oe There were two in ae ss Cemetery. neckline. Br idesmaids were, 50 registered voters, Election day floor length satin-and-lace gown Iher a Gail Bogart: and Jo is dune We - . trimmed with seed pearis and ir: ‘Ann /illiams, Members whose terms are ex- ridescent sequens. The princess ‘Edmund L. Windeler. Both have = lee Kost will be the first safety pa- ram oo hay aha tana eee ne requested petition forms, according coRar and wong seey Wy eGre detective wit aeing in BL a | will welcome any boys and girls | age 15 to 20 to attend. H suf- ficient interest is shown a squad- Thomas Gertcher, 17, of 30557) ron will be formed. He died Sunday at Denver. Brentwood St., Royal Oak, who! William Baer will report on the R. Grimes, 43, of Denver, Colo. church dining room. Mrs. J of operation of all departments, | they attended last former Rochester resident, at Drayton School including additional help and Davis will be general ce state conference . DRAYTON PLAINS — A bird-| higher salaries. and Mrs. Edward Ennis isin week be held at 11 a. m. Friday at the Gets 3-Year Probation house contest will highlight the, Royal Oak Mayor Howard F. Ch@rge of ticket sales ee | William R. Potere Funeral Home program. when Cub Pack 52 meets Kelley said the budget would have A question and answer session With burial in Mt. Avon Ceme- Opportunities for classroom in- tonight at 7-30 in the school audi- will constitute the program. tery. tonight sc u aes cute Iron Leg ee a Novi Dems Ask Support . New officers to be installed will His body will lie at the funeral, pleaded guilty ‘April 16 to stealing struction in first aid, towo way 7 (ee ie = ee $11.50 ~ on Moving Polling Booth be Mrs. White, president; Mrs. home from Thursday until time two tires and $30 from a Southfield radio, and flight will be offered, | Wolf badges wil! be awarded to 7 Ja NOVI TOWNSHIP The Novi Bact. first viee president; Mrs. of service Friday. [Township gas station in a night- in addition to actual places to! 13 Cubs and one will also re- | thousand. The budget must be : = the: ivovl , . . . t with filght tech- Domocentio Glunhae Ile Joseph Galardi, second yice presi- jtime breakin, was sentenced to acquaint members with filght celye a gold arrow. ‘adopted by aay 31. emocratic ub has called on Meni: MeMiall Mere ne ae ; S: erritt, secretary; C oA |three years’ probation and_, pay* niques. Oommerce Area members to support a proposal for relocation of the polling booth for |ment of $100 court costs yesterday Mrs. Robert Alexander, treasurer; = by Oakland County Circuit Judge Potluck Wednesday Paul: Knox will be inducted into Music Recital Slated paky histor the group as a Bob Cat and two. the second precinct ant Miss ee siablid Methodist Units ‘Frank L. Doty transferees from other areas, John) SEYMOUR LAKE — Fifty piano|. The issue of changing the place - | . m 122 WATERFORD — Ladies G u ild also be initiated. Herbert, will’ and baton students of Sally Miller of the poll will be taken up-at the Mrs. Hixon to Be Guest Slate Meetings | American @apital is sought to Christ Dutheran Church, Water-) |and Brenda Miller will give a pub- Township Board meeting..Monday at Lake Orion Meeting | COMMERCE TOWNSTIIP—Four establish a rayon fiber making ford, will hold a potluck luncheon outh Lyon Set Year's Last Meetings ior Has school PTA Wednesday, May 9, in the school auditorium. His subject will be “A peek into the education af tomorrow.’ -Dr. Britton lattended the White | House conference, and is widely known. His concern ‘is about “how our children are to face the future.” There will be group singing, and refreshments will close the eve- | ning. Four Towns 6 The Executive Board of Four | Towns PTA is meeting at the home of Mrs. Don Farmiloe of Cooley Lake Rd., at 8 ew Ves om” Wednesday. 72 Scholarships Granted in Area MSU Director Lists 432 Michigan’ Awards Effective in Fall Twenty-two entrance scholarships have been granted to Oakland County graduates out of a total of 452 scholarships granted by Michi- \gan State University, according to J. Robert Stewart, ship director. The awards, which become effec- tive fall term, 1956, are made on the basis of scholarship, leader- ship and citizenship qualities dis- played in high school, and cover |tuition fees. Stewart said the entrance scholarships are ‘awarded te students who would find it diffi- cult to attend college without assistance. The scholarships are awarded for one year, but may be renewed~for four years if the student ‘meets the require. ments of the all-university schol- arship committee. Oakland County winners are as follows, listed by schools: Avondale School—Theodore K. Bara- art Birmingham—Mary Joyce ets: Share nL. Lewis, Carole J. Neg iClawien Earl N Musson’ Farmington—-Sharon L. Regentik Lincoln High, Perndale—Denise Don- ;mayer. Prentis Edwards. Hazel Park—Shirley J. Barber, gares K. McDonald West Bloomfield High—Patricia A, Knapp. Gloria J. McKim Madison Heights—Annette N. Lindser, Brandon Township High— Alphonse b Potter mph David 8. Martin; Bue E. Wali- Mare **Pontiae—Richara A. Kilby; Victoria J, Madison High, Royal Oak—Prank 8. asa. Southfield—Theodore K. Robinson. South Lyon—Donald H. Pettengil!. Wailed Lake—Chariene L. Carlson Two Pontiac Residents Draw Probationary Terms Two Pontiac men, convicted of a {Waterford Township breakin March 29, were sentenced yesterday to |two years’ probation and payment \of $100 court costs and restitution /by Oakland County Circuit Judge He = “Doty. s Berg, 71, 3 St.. ee * james Housekeeper, 23, 320 Harrison St., had pleaded guiltv April 16 to stealing 10 cases of beer and wine, valued at $73.46, from a Waterford Township gro- cery BLOT Power Mower Stolen A $90 power mower was taken from in front of a hardware store at 509 N. Perry street over the weekend, city police said today. ‘The business is owned by Peter ' Karner. “My doctor Sates St Joseph | ¥ Aspirin For Children” Says MRS. W. C. KEIM, Washington, D.C. The 1% a ta mad assure accu- josage wil eak- poss Children like its orange A= flavor, accept it willingly. ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN FOR CHILDREW lic recital in the Brandon Township,night. The Democratic Club has lant in-Egypt. | Wednesd t 12:30 p High School Auditorium at § p.m. asked its members to turn out at LAKE ORION—The Judah Lake) meetings are scheduled for vari-,? eee ecnesdays3 Pe m. Extension Group will meet at 7:30 ous units of the Commerce Meth- Thursday evening. the meeting p.m. Wednesday at the Aerotd odist Church WSCS next week. Seholz home, 2586 Joslyn. Mary A.| The schedule follows: No Meeting in May WATERFORD—The Ladies Aux- iliary of the Waterford Commu- Dae Same ROE e STAMPS nity Church will not meet in th : ¢ ; satis of May. . n the T D ° ] t Hace pone Demenstration Agent Wednesday—Sarah Chakko Cir- if a O VISplay uaen TU | will be @ guest. ciel af) Spi In| the horse’ ot | DOUBLE HOLDENS The lesson 6n “Meat Prepara- vary ¢ Russell Field, 7875 Com. | fie County Calendar ROCHESTER — The Baldwin\Gertrude Burns, Kathleen McDou- tion” will be given by Mrs. Scholz.) meree Rd.; Hannah Moore Cir. | a eke ‘School at Goodison’ will hold its sec- gal, third grade; Eleanor Johnson; | cle at 8 p.m, in the home of I RADING ” 46 FeaM wii Ond annual Open House and Art fourth grade; Mary Gilcher, fifth, ae of Guilty Entered | Mrs. John McMaster, 3586 Mo- | DRUG STORES 148 N. Saginaw St. Near Sears West Huron at Telegraph 4985 DIXIE HWY. Next Keen Feed, Drayton Plains pel og! Orion Lodge No Le gab communication at 17:30 to Dieht Baronte vane kp: ties | berly; and the Barbara Heck Circle at 12:30 p.m. for luncheon in the home of Mrs. J. C. Dinta- |Exhibition in the main building, and Robert McKenney, from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday. and sixth grade teacher. apiey 7). Every child from kindergarten’ Baldwin PTA will be in charge Binceliie for through sixth grade will either of refreshments “display art work or some cane, Town and Oventry Guild of the Roches. aeconiolsniveral Principal in Circuit Court ; C@rged with stealing a car from a local dealer's lot, John Campbell!) ™an, 7990 Marshalsea, of 84 W. Huron St. pleaded guilty, Thursday—Catherine booth Cir- at his circuit court arraignment cle at & p.m. in the home of Mrs. | opt ape} shares bese ph MM ° ts. Ra Lake Rd. formerly of their regular meeting at ter onal Church will t H 4 w newagy, the, name of mee ee thet Forming Little League. jyesterday Martin Smith, 3165 Adele Terrace. | hurch will meet Wednesday at 7-30 teachers as hostesses. Mrs. Doro) METAMORA —A Little League) Campbell, who failed to furnish rn | = Oe Re Seer ere. thy Whipple, art. consultant of Baseball Club of Metamorayschool- borid of $2,000,..was returned to To Talk at Waterford: Charen’ win ‘meet at {230 Rochester Community Schools, has boys, 12-15 years of age, is being Oakland County Jail to await sen- hold y at aheloe isons of ois arrangéd the art display with Mrs. formed. The boys are playing tence May 14 by Judge Frank L. WATERFORD—Charles Maxwell sandwiches and go on| Betty McGowan of the ‘kinder-| every weekday evening, and any) 'Doty. will be the speaker at the prayer Bethany Guild ot oy regationai| arten: Shirley Hugger, Dolly Best boy within this age range who: - - — . (meeting of the Waterford Commu- will meet ty ‘aa mer S| and Opal Waker, first grade; Made- wishes to join should be on the There are “40, 500, 000 miles of nity Church to be held at 7:30 p.m. | epucprent highways in the world “Wednesday at the church. [tine Flumerfelt, second. grade; | school coins at 6 pm the home of 219 Linwood WEDNESDAY Ey Thrifty pee Charge LESS for PRESCRIPTIONS (| EpepnSereLsng Filling) *: 95, Harrison MSU scholar- — gers Oe ive - “Game Eastern Trip cau NEW. YORK # — The Detroititopped the Tigers in hitting in, im another department, too. That shave cominitted only a’ dozen! cane which is 2nd only-to the;experts with their fielding, espe-. Tigers, 2nd best hitters in the|1955, now top them in fielding.| is the home run department. De- errors in the season’s ist ten| Yankees’ 17. cially in double: plays. ‘world if we tried to make ‘every- ‘This wou'd be @ sor one fit into'a pattern. don’t say, therefore, all front Of-|,imerican League last season, cur-|But Detroit, away down in Sth) trolt has clouted 16, against 15 (games. Chica ‘ ; ’ - go hasn't miscued| The Tigers were distinct sur-/ Home run production also has * fice brass should copy Bill Veeck. ; [rently are the loop's second best/place in hitting, is a jump ahead) for the Yankees whe top the yet, but has played only six games. prises in the hitting, fielding and been a surprise, although only ) x * * * fielders. And only the New Yor! kof: the league-leading White Sox in| league im the batting averages. | With rookie Reno Bertoia figur‘ home run departments as they ar- three of 16 have come with men 4 But I do believe there are certain fundamentals of Yankees top them in double plays that department. The Tigers, counting two Sun- jing in practically all of them, the rived today for the Ist of two on bases. Despite this, however, sheer These turnstiles. Take the opening game Veeck lived up to his reputation as baseball's an expe the fans howling, CRESS or dis- showman by stagin game show that solving in laughter. ¥* * *»* Fireworks thundered in the tropical sky and spelled out ::Hi, fans.” A pretty girl walked a tight wire 80 feet! above ground from a light tower in center field to right. The stadium was darkened and the sprinted out in spanking new uniforms, qne at a time, for a crisp personal introduction in a Slatiog spotlight. Max Patkin, coach and oldtime friend days, went to work pantomining in the coaching box. | Jimmy Burns reported: laughter. Some of the feminine shrie. high in the press box, an indication Veeck may know the secret of interessne women in baseball.” * There was a aromatic descent in a helicopter by Satchel Paige, a player. brawl on the basepaths, and a It was topped off by a Miami vic- game viewed by 8,816. tory over Buffalo, 10-3. * Sateh Paige looks like a Cub Scout compared with Al Payer who will play third base for Sugarloaf, Pa., in the Anthracite League this season. —_ can run, hit, is a entertainment, appealing to male and female, youth and adult, which Veeck uses as a guide. undamentals, not the Veeck mannerisms, deserve’ study because they pay off in whirling at Miami the other night. greatest msive, but exciting, pre- 4 Marlins a combination clown and of Veeck’s from Cleveland “Patkin provoked gales of could be heard}. x * x * . ; class infielder and is 52. OLYMPIC BOWL — Airview of the Melbourne Cricket Ground, AP Wirephote Melbourne Australia, which will be the setting for the main events from $5,000 to 110,000. The Cricket’ Ground, located within a mile of : of the eight-day Olympic Games which begin on Nov. 22 of this year. the center of Melbourne, is one of the best known sports arenas in Decline Hits . The new portion at lower left will increase the stadium's capacity the British Commonwéalth. Major Crowds AP Survey Shows 10 Per Cent Slump Under Figures for 1955 NEW YORK w® — Major league baseball attendance is slumping approximately 10 per cent with 11 clubs showing a decrease in a comparison with dast year’s fig- ures. e * * An Associated Press survey re-| vealed today that the big league) ball clubs have played before’ 1,059,172 fans this season. The total in as many home dates in «1955 was 1,176,172. With the weather a likely factor, the decrease is 117,695. * * ° Only the New York Yankees, | Boston Red Sox, St. Louis Cards, Chicago Cubs and Detroit Tigers’ are showing gains. The Yanks are _up 57,000 and the Red Sox almost! 20,000 with the other three teams | only slightly ees * Miwaukee, en has led in at- tendance since it went big league in 1953, yesterday played before its smallest County Stadium crowd— 6,090. The Braves have drawn 55,391 for three home games and they had 65,271 in the till last season. Tunney Advises Rocky Not to Change Mind MONTREAL (#—Gene Tunney, who retired as undefeated heavy- weight champion of the world al- é most three decades ago, said to-| day he has advised Rocky Mar-, ciano: “Don't ever change your mind.’ Marciano retired as undefeated heavyweight champion last Friday) and Tunney said he sent Rocky | a telegram the next day “‘extend- ing my congratulations on his de-! cision." Conrad Sets ad Sets Sights on 2nd British Title NEW YORK @®—Joe Conrad, the British amateur golf champion, will attempt to duplicate Lawson Little’s feat by winning the cov- eted title two years in a row. ' Little captured it in 1934-35. Con- r@i will head a strong American delegation to Troon, Scotland, -for the competition May 28-June 2, the U.S. Golf Assn., announced yes- terday. Conrad won the championship last year while serving as a lieu- tenant in the U.S. Air Forge: He also was a member of the Walker Cup team at the time. Note to All Leagues League baseball and softball standings will be printed in the _ Pontiac Press each Thursday. Standings turned in by mail must be received by the Press sports department by 4:00 p.m. each Wednesday, or they can be turned in personally up to 8:00 a.m. on Thursdays. They must be neatly .printed | _or typed. No standings will be accepted by telephone. U.S. Booters Lose NEW YORK (INS) —The Is- raeli Olympic soccer team regis-7 tered a 2-to-1 success Sunday in its one-game invasion of the United States by topping the American, League soccer all-stars before 42,; 455 at Yankee Stadium. New Crowd Marks . AMERICAN LEAGUE ; @ Ww oL Pet. GB : ; } Chicago ot oe 5S 1 23 — York. ....g.0c-00°8 3 329 — Cleveland ...,..-..-.6 5& 545 2 . es creianena be cseascesce 2 @ 3438: 3 a { smc 5 444 3 re DETROIT’ 4 6 (400 3% : jeansee cw 3 . ae ‘ MELBOURNE «®—Berlin's rec-,in many cases only seats left are|ready 40,000 tickets have been ord of 3,000,000 spectators for the| those reserved for overseas visi-|taken by the 50 schools canvassed. 4 . MONDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES DETROIT at New York—Gromek (1-1) vs. nS bi (3-0). tcago at Baltimore—night—Harsh- — (1-0) vs. Palica (0-3). 1936 Olympics likley will be /tors. smashed at the Melbourne Games| There will be no vacant reserved|Tasmania, 400 miles south of Mel- November 22-December 8. seats for any day of athletics at| bourne, have chartered aircraft to Special parties of students from (19 of Detroit's 33 runs thus far | Nobody expected them, with Al/have come on circuit clouts. (.340), Bill Tuttle (.279), | Boone (284), Earl Torgeson (.283) | | and Frank House (.293), Harvey Kuenn| Pitching has been and continues Ray. to be a Detroit worry. Ned Garver may not be ready to be to rettrn to action for several away down in 5th- place in batting days because of a pulled tendon jwith a miere .241 average, even in his elbow. at this early stage. (Parenthetical | figures are for 1955.) Currently Kaline is hitting only -195, Kuenn, .184; House, .167; Boone, .231; Torgeson, .235, and Tuttle, .244. Charley Maxwell, however, has a remarkable .435 for the six games he has worked. Most experts predicted — and still do — that the Tigers will hit of .266. They now are currently 25 | points below it. handling the 2nd base pivot, the | PRESS BOX University of Michigan's rifle) team walked off. with team and’ in- The U of M gunners fated 612 out of 750 possible points, and Jan Gogulski of Grand Rapids took, individual honors with 134 of a possible 30 pelts. Fred Setans, | ease. publicity man for University of Michigan athletics and now director of community relations at the Uni- versity of Detroit was named by Detroit's civic committee, in charge of staging the U. 8. Olym- pic swimming finals next Aug- ast, as coordinator of the pro- gram. u- Australia has only 9,000,000 peo-|the main stadium where an esti-| fly to Melbourne for one-day visits ple, but has a higher percentage| mated 880,000 people will see track'to the games. of sport fans than any other na-|and field events. At the track and field, the only | tion, | Nearly 100,000 people will watch tickets left are the cheaper stand- Already 1,250,000 seats have! 18, sessions of swimming and again) ing room only, 40,000 in all, which | Cleveland at Washington—night— Wynn (2-0) vs. Ramos (1-0). Kansas City at Boston—Kellner (1-1 vs. Porterfield (1-1) | NATIQNAL LEAGUE a ae e @t Louis 3 3 ‘esi _ = sold for various events and only seats available are those set | will be sold at the gate on the Brooklyn ee son | aside for overseas visitors. |day of the events. Australians are Cincinnat! ,...... oe 8 S&S 306 148! s e¢ 8 likely to line up outside the gates \Peteasineie SeadboesG | 4 TT MSBL fF The cycling velodrome olds for those tickets 24 hours before | Pittsburgh (6 6 485 2 | j pan § 20,000 and all sessions will be|the events are scheduled, Chicago 3 7 300) 34a packed, as will be hockey and soc- _ @¢ * © MONDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 2, Milwaukee @. Only same neues AY’S GAMES Brooklyn by Cinetaaeti= night—Erskine! (1-0) vs. Klippsteim (1-1). Philadelphia eat Milwaukee—night— cer stadium which has 35,000 capa- city. For the football finals in Mel JET PILOT — Plastic helmets bourne, which sttract 300,000 fans, may not be.as eye-catching as the | for 56 Season s both the opening and closing! seats 36 hours before the “play” eek son (ga) ve mani (t 4), silk caps, but jockeys at Agua| cecerinnkes and a similar crowd | siren sounds, in the bleakest of | New York at Chicago—Hearn (0-1) vs : Hacker (0-1). Caliente, Mex., are wearing them| The Michigan State Baseball|is sure to see soccer finals at the} Melbourne winter. tsburgh at St. Louis—night—Little-| main stadium. * ¢ ° field (0-0) Bi Miseil ae O). tor Protection in « case of spills. |League held its 1956 organizational | ——— |meeting Saturday at the Hayes Ho-| Add to these totals the tens of | eae 110,000 people will wit-;some people queue for unreserved The 2 Australian track and! He will also direct ‘the press, radio and television promotion of the meet. Olympic tryouts are | scheduled for August 7-10 Brennanc Pools in Rouge Park. an Veteran Virgil Trucks, both- | ered with a sore arm, was hit heavily in a short relief stint against Cleveland Sunday. Rookie Bud Black failed in his ist start, also Sunday and against Cleve- land. Young Bob Miller hasn't been impressive in recent as- signments. Harris who has won his two 1956 starts ifor the Yankees. After two here, the Tigers move By the same token, with Bertoia | on to Boston, Baltimore and Wash- gton betore ‘returning to Briggs Tigers have crossed up pre-season ‘Stadium May uN. Shift of a Saves Trouble Lovisiana Teams’ Avoid Segregation ' Crisis by Switching Site BATON ROUGE, La. The dividual honors in the 1st annual|=V@"éeline League avoids a seg- collegiate trophy matches held at|regation crisis tonight when a two- a Perry; Ohio over the week-|game series moves from Baton’ || Rouge to Lafayette. The crisis would have arisen had the series been played here as scheduled. The city has imposed on Negro players in the Rouge ball park.2 ‘Lafayette Rebels refused to play the Lake Charles Giants, leaders in Baton Rouge General Manager Art Kowalski announced the trans- ifer of the series to Lafayette. If | the league is able to reach a deci- sion on the problems at its May 6 meeting, he said, Lafayette will Telegrams from Michigan alum-|return the two games at Baton ini clubs | received change Birmingham Ex-| cll Fielding H. Yost, in whose mem- Community: House * * ® Julius McCoy, Michigan State's | high scoring basketball star, was all over the country were Rouge later in the season. 2 paving ebue o “7ck Netters held this nose at the Bireingras| Blank Chiefs in SVC Match Up against a- hot Arthur Hill selected in the annual National |'©is squad, Pontiac, High Chiefs Basketball Association draft. He | yesterday afternoon were shut out picked Steve Gromek : somewhere around their 1955 mark | ‘1-1? today to oppose Whitey Ford, f ah tel in Jackson. Operating with six teams last year in its first season operation, the league has ex- Indian Guffaw of panded to 12 cities for the new sea- Lopez Can’ t See Yankees |son which will start in mid-May. jat ‘thousands who will watch rowing|field championships in Melbourne at Lake Wendouree, road cycling; were a sample of what is to be Essendon and the _ marathon expected during the games period. from free vantage points, and the | The first day—when Landy ran 7 2 ¢ |Lindquist’s club faces Flint Central | Berlin rec ord, looks certain to go.|his fabulous mile after papain Ismael Pace, Argentine boxing here today in another Valley test *. to pick up a fallen comrade—the -gisjlgpead and owner of the en ithen goes to Saginaw Friday for a 7,0. The match &t Murphy Park tere was the Ist blank Chiefs |have drawn this season. Coach Vic was the only player from a Michigan college selected. Luna Park Stadium was killed i JERSEY CITY, N.J. —If-you tonight. They won an SANs The infant league will be brok- | Victoria's heels are taking an|gates were shut by order of the, New York Yankees: might win the! ‘regular shortstop. Casey Stengel Dearborn and Saginaw, Kalama- American League pennant by a8 tried to go along with rookie, 2°, Grand Rapids, Jackson, Bat- much as 10 games. Jerry Lumpe, but the lad didn’t, tle Creek, Lansing and Muske- That's what they're saying ¢j) the bill. Phil Rizutto is too 808 Comprise the western group. around the circuit, but the gay/old Stengel is hoping to send Gil’ Officers were elected at the Jack- Senor, who ran a bad second to McDougald to the position next son gathering. Jim Terrell of Sag- the Yanks last year with his Tribe. week. inaw was elected president, Paul sk ESTING iE) Tee HD |.,Furthermore,”” said Lopez, 'Parks of Pontiac and Stan Galdys . How can the ents be fa- in the majors. In two years, Herb vice-presidents, and. Mike Rogan of jvored?”” he asked today. “Why. crore will be the greatest in base- Dearborn was chosen secretary-| they re hurting for a shortstop- a) I'm serious when I say t's treasurer. J. Layler of Jackson, J. And don't tell me they're not: Just another Letty Grove.” Seltenrich of Battle Creek and.D.| {who is their regular at the posi- ‘Law of Kalamazoo were named 'teur Athletic Union competition be-| | tion ? F | “Certainly, the Yanks are good. Elks Softball Drill | tsteee. |cause two members ran ag But if they're favorites, then we're Me ‘cofavorites, and our chances of! | winning are every bit as good as i theirs.’ AAU Hits W&J Squad - for ‘Contact’ With Santee NORFOLK, Va. (® — The entire, abide by the decision of Wallace William and Mary track team has| |Wade, Southern Conference com- | been declared ineligible for Ama- lone nar former professionals as team mem- bers He would not comment fur- ome. qe out that Southern Conference rules ains!'do not prohibit its athletes from See miler Wes Santee, athletic director aiae : Se mbers of the Elks City league ; Th MSU M t | Jack Freeman said Monday: competing Uw ingectvice teams, oc) softball team will work out today ree a men | and Wednesday, at Webster and « th ee confine a ee owl to crac own we YY ® ‘North Side fields. Deed in Olympi Trial . em it “ The Indians head for Washing- Time for béth workouts is C S because of W & x a ipation in) Core said the AAU has not ‘‘de-| ton and a game with the SUE o'clock. , HOLLYWOOD w—Three Michi- A Ge Santee ne meet Clare d that members of the Wil-| ee ~ gan State wrestlers have advanced) “ iam and Mary track team are ito the 8rd round of the ‘Olympic Freeman said he received a [Professionals because they have wrestling team tryouts. They're. letter Mouday from John T. Core, Cipanta against Santee; the) icompeting unattached, | first vice president of the Vir- jAAU h as said only they are in-| In the welterweight division, Jim| ginia Association of the AAU, Ferguson, MSU, pinned Ben North- | declaring the AAU cannot accept | petition.” : | lrup, of San Diego, in 10:05 of their, @tries from the William and ‘2nd round match. | Mary team. 'Wilson’s Big 10 Job | In the 191 pound (light heavy-| te v 'weight) division, Ken Maidlow,| In Richmond, Core acti Five Years | MSU, defeated Dick O'Shaughn- the action had been taken against, CHICAGO (®—Kenmeth L. (Tug) lessy, ef the Air Force. In thé same William and Mary. He said as far Wilson, athletic commissioner of |division, Dale Thomas, MSU, de-as any other colleges competing the Big 10 Conference, was given |feated John Jensen. against the Williamsburg school) Three other wrestlers competing was concerned, it would be up to a five-year contractextension by jon their own from Michigan were the National Collegiate - Athletic Western. Conference University) leliminated in the second round.’ Association. |presidents yesterday. |Among the flyweights, Lewis Drew, * © « Commissioner since 1945, Wil-- Core sited a section of the NCAA- son's present contract expires this. month. Salary terms were not dis-' | B NCAA Body Is Silent on Infractions | NEW ORLEAD'S (#—The Nation- | report contained or whether the approving applications far mem- ‘al -Collegiate Athletic Assn.'s en- committee reported any evidence | bership and interpreting rules forcement arm, the Committee on of rule violations by member | The council worked out a plan | Infractions, gave its annual report) schools. Members found guilty by|for the Olympic basketball squad of Berkley, Mich., high school, was pinned by Dick Delgado of Okla- AAU alliance to bear out his con- jhoma_ in ha seconds. __tention and said the AAV would closed im © fee today to the group's powerful/the ¢ouncil can be reprimanded, ‘to practice again-t college oppo | hers. - & ‘council \fined or put on probation. | sition without _ Violating NCAA ie | * 6s @ | ee * * ® ‘rules. : | si, | Walter Byers. NCAA executive| All sessions ‘of the 18man coun- | ** ¢ cil’s meeting are closed to the The by-law involved says no col- /University of Kentucky, ‘lege can play a game against an- ‘of the infractions committee, had| Press. Byers outlines the day's ac- jother school. until Dec. ‘1. The a Ken- ‘just started his report when the tivities at a press conference fol- council did hot waive the’ provi-' ANCeS ‘first day session of the three-day lowing ‘the ose of each session. sion. But it deqjided the Olympic, at Churchill Downs Saturday. Train- | .ouncil meeting ended yesterday. | * 8 jteam could play an All-Star squad}, Most of pecteriay § session Was | made up of heed from various Byers de Stiaed ‘Me say what the! ‘thivoted . to selecting commit} ee\| ' schools. 4 director, said A. D. Kirwan of the | chairman | AP Wirephote | DERBY TALK — Louisa, the dachshund, and Count Chic, tucky Derby candidate seem to be talking over-the Count's eh in the classic which will be held er Lloyd Lawson holds the halter as groom Tom Polley changes -the } ‘| colt's bandages. , want to get a king-si flaw, seis here from the Brooklyn en into eastern and western di- |amazing interest in the games. health authorities when 22,000 Ios t rel panes S Al Dodgers 10 last night. . | visions this year. Pontiac GMTC |Special sections are being set ple had crammed into the uncom) out o ee Manager surcins | will compete in the eastern di- aside for school children and al- ‘Ipleted Olympic Park. Lopez, mention that perhaps the Right now, the Yanks have no Vision along with Royal Oak, OO — 1 St. wo wins and one loss to its credit, | hae Highland Park St. ees er lost to Don Farrar and Rich today at Palmer Park in Detroit. |Schater 6-0, 6-3. “we've got. the best pitching staff of Grand Rapids were named first |a@ Buenos Aires auto accident yes- lterday. * * * Griff's Grill, Class A baseball ea will practice Wednesday at p.m. at Washington Junior High. | lal interested candidates are in-| \vited to atene tbe WEE | ee 8 a team, Teams i in 2nd Round Holland, Ugoslavia and C ‘zecho-| 1 return match against the ‘Jacks. | Bill Bonner lost to Ted Grigg |6-4, 6-1; Ted Wiersema lost to Bill Vogt.6-1, 6-0; Bob Erb lost to Bob Burnett 6-0, 6-0; Gary Thomas was defeated by Don Mertz 6-4, 6-3, |and Gary Wylie lost to Rod Spence 6-1, 6-0. j Dave Scriven, John Doerr lost to : with|Bob Harman, Joe Binasio 6-1, 6-2. ‘and Dick Mallory and. Fred Roes- Buick 9 Practice Practice sessions have been ar- | ovale all were in the second|ranged for the Oliver Buick Class competition today, At Durham, N. C., Wade pointed Pound of the European Davis Cup|A city league baseball club, today while Norway and Thursday, at 5:15 p.m. Both held a commanding 2-0 lead over drills are set for Columbia-Joslyn Israei in a first-round match. lother organizations which may have | South field. Secrets of Better Golf By Patty Berg The average player is troubled! when the ball lies ithe putting surface. ferred to as a “pitch and run.’ For the idea is to pitch the ball) low and let it run the rest of the’ way to the hole. A pitch and run! shot should be used when there are no hazards, such as a trap, be- tween you and the hole.’ ! The No. 9 iron or a wedge is | probably the average player’s best choice for this shot. Your 9-iron enables you to loft the ball slightly. Aim for a spot on the green, and allow the pon to run to the hole. Use the ‘overlapping grip for a pitch-and-run shot, gripping the club two or three inches down the, shaft. This will shorten your back- swing. A short chip — or pitch- and-run—shot does not require a full’ swing. A very narrow stance is required |; for this shot, since there is little’ pivot or foot action in executing it.| | Often this type of shot is re- ture of the | *e Use an open stdnce which is) formed-by drawing the left foot, back from the line of flight. Your’ weight is fairly distributed with) emphasis on the left foot, to =| jable you to hit the ball first and take a little turf afterwards. ; | Your hands and arms are close in toward your body during this shot. Your hands should be slightly ahead of the ball at the jeligible for AAU-sanctioned com- by the small chip shot called for address. a few feet from 4s you assume your stance. look jat the hole and get a mental pic- spot on the green in | which ther) wish the ball to hit. Use an open stance with the feet close together for a chip or ¢ pitch-and-run shot. Hands are ahead of the ball at the address and the club is gripped about fwe or three inches down the shaft. f , / THE PONTI AC PRESS, URSDAY, MAY 1, 1956 + an por Auer Nery, nan MANE U wit 4 chee the sun must have ben a source of inspiration for high® school {pitchers as threé ‘ sparkling were recorded in yesterday's baseball action. The most brilliant performanee was turned in by Orchard Lake Franckowak struck out 16 batters to lead the Eaglets to their Ist win of the season, Bob Croasdell’s| single spoiled Franckowiak’s no-, hit bid. Terry Raymond and Len Final Softball Meet Set for Wednesday The final meeting for managers ‘of men's softball teams will be| held Wednesday night at 7:30 in| the Freedom Shrine Room on the ist floor of City Hall. Teams desiring to play in the | Pontiac Parks and Recreation De- partment’s. city softball leagues must /be represented at this meet- ing. Teams not present that have not made previous arrangements, will be omitted from league mem- bership. Important items to complete) league organization will be dis- cussed Wednesday, including team and league classification, sched- ules, playoff procedure, rule changes, and state tournamerit pos- sibilities. The deadline for entry fees is 5 p.m. this Friday. Moore Wastes Little Time Beating ‘Tiger’ j TUCSON, Ariz. UW) — Aging Ar- | chie Moore, winding up his tuneup tour defense of his light- dily di for the heavyweight crow? in June, han- spatched Tiger Gene Both fighters weighed in at 1891, for the scheduled 10-rounder. St. Mary. It was the 4th loss in a row for the Rams. Dave Gaddis hurled a neat four- hitter as Clarkston blanked Nortb- ville, 2-0, in a Wayne-Oakland League contest at Northville. A walk to Don Alexander and con- secutive singles by Garry Nelson, Chuck Passage and Gaddis gave the Wolves their two runs in the Ist inning. tle with Berkley’s Herb Duncan in an Inter-Lakes game at Water- ford and Kruskie came out on \“te Tom Bryce, an infield out, and Ren Kind's single in the Ist run he needed. Al McFarlane of Milford prob- ably deserves recognition as the tough-luck pitcher in Oakland County this season. McFarlane igave up only one hit yesterday, | but lost a Holly, 2-1, in a Wayne- ‘Oakland tussle at Milford. | A single by Coggins the Ist in- ning was the lone Holly hit and the’ only safety made against McFar- | lane in the last 14 innings. McFar- lane. tossed a no-hitter against that one too. Milford Committed nine errors to provide shoddy support and walks by McFarlane also contibut- ied to his downfall. Both Holly runs were unearned. Huber hurled |a six-hitter for the winners. straight Suburban League decision, 5-2, to St. Clem- Thompson was staggered twice in the first round with rights to he jaw—the same punch Moore used for the knockout. The Los Angeles fighter landed se phe oe ees before the champ sent him wobbly-kneed to the ropes. Lane Beats McGilmore @ BILLINGS, Mont. ®—Diamond Dick Lane, Billings- middleweight, outpointed Candy McGilmore of San Francisco last night in their 10-round boxing main event. oe ff Scoring Leaders Tetey The hesecisied Prose ‘ ten, ost, 13; Bauer, : 1 anile New York, 10; tore, Werts, Cleveland and ‘ork, 9. UNS BATTED IN—Mantle, New York, 1; York, 17: Triandos, Boston, 5; Ve New Yor 4 non, Boson, Skowron, ork and Lemon, Washington, 4; five players tied| 4 TRIPLES Boyd, Baltimore, — = cd ‘Bauer, — York and Tettel Se Washington, 1 players tied | “HOME BONS —werts, Ci Lo ere vd Ber. | and Baltimore, Kaline Detroit, Tesspeen . = sas eee and Olson and Blevers, Washing- ton, STOLEN BASES — Philley, cheering Bauer, New York and Lemon, Washin, New York, ‘STRIKEOUTS — Score, Cleveland, 31; aoe: Washin Pittsburgh and ‘Boyer, Lou RUNS BATTED IN—Post and Jablonski. Cinemnnati, 13; ‘ jal, St, is, nella Brooklyn and Spencer, HITS—Long. Lit it 18; Dark, New York and Boyer. 16; Ashburn | ie en ia, is: five prego tied with 13. Furillo, Brooklyn, 6; — New Yor wi ME “RUNS. Post, Cincinnati, 7: Jab- Long, Pitrcmrer, YOUR WHISKERS | NOTYOUR FACE! lonski, Cincinnati and lr ne 5 hear Pittsburgh. 4; eight players STOLEN: ‘BASES — Gi Broo! Drake, d Wails, Pittsburgh, 2 ' hn ae Exclusive guide bar 1.000; Craig, Brooklyn, Meyer, Philadei-|~ | pia, Lawrence, Cincinnati “and -_ ‘stretches skin tight... | * sTRIKEOUT a Friend, Pictsburgh, stops blade bite! wah Newcombe, unter adelphia, 13; "craig Breoucer sree "Jone me | ~ Chicago and ‘W ington, New York, il t Monday’ In Brief | f Italy — Althea - Gibson, | New York swept to her fourth seuseeeaive Evetsherp Schick ropean play as she won the women’ ‘S title im the Florence horizontal-grip pany guide bar smooths PHILADELPHIA—Ray Stanley resigned i —— — — af te. Unleeray ot “xn own ac eCloske i rome ap gente) as ponte . pops Pena ue RO BPOLE. ma —The et Mitten 8 and gives you am Ww ible | for AAU competition "because two. men | | closer, smoother, ran a te banned for raecapeing axaondive = safer shaves! inoney. WRESTLING HOLLYWOOD, Calif —Bill Kersiake, ‘Na- tional §=AAU heavyweight titiist from Cleveland, scored his second straight -vic- Hydro-magic Razor, so usec as many days in the U.S. Olym- 24 Gold’: blades 2 : and travel case, (7% WAIT! [Le ™ ] . * 5 Plan Your . . ; \ With - {pontiac travel! SCHICK SERVICE ee HYDRO-MAGIC Opens—May ~ Prep Pitchers Shine, Fire Three Shutouts The long awaited appears appearance of Mallat each collected two hits for and fanned 12 batters in the- process, Joe Schults worked on the mond. for “the Shamrocks, who didn’t score until the 7th inning. Three ‘scheduled games: Monday were postponed. The Walled Lake’ Framington, St: Rita-RO St. Mary, and St. Benedict-St. James con- tests were cplled of due to wet Waterford'’s Jerry Kruskie en- — | gaged in a brilliant pitching bat- | top, 1-0. Each pitcher allowed | only five hits, but a base on balls stanza handed Kruskie the only Brighton last Thursday and lost| St. Michael dropped its 4th Catholic | entof Center Line at Columbia. | Joslyn. Clem Kramer pitched a | three-hitter for the Clentents | grounds. ‘ Maples, Skippers . CMC Point Winners Among the more than a dozen Class A school track teams fight- ing for places last Saturday at Central Michigan College relays, /jwere Birmingham and Waterford. | points, Birmingham had 23 and Water- ford 644 points. Maples’ scoring was produced by | ities for Ist in the pole vault’ at'< Help Us Celebrate Our ED WILDIAMS eb PHS Chiefs were ‘winners with 70! 11. feet 10 inches., Bill MeFarlen| and Tom Segal; 4 3rd in the low hurdles by Joe Kidwell; 4th. im-the shot by Bob Stephenson; 4th in the 2-mile relay (Lynn Benn, Ken Gertz, Jay -Stark and Howard Didir); 4th in mile relay (Don Mike Nordstrom) and a 5th by Doug Wuggazer in the mile. Birmingham frogsh meets Fern- dale freshmen today at Birming- ham; has a varsity and reserve Imeet at Hazel Park Wednesday; Tate, Steve Pew, Steve Hunter andy [Oak trish st Miredaghess and goes to Albion College Invita- tional =: * » * oh. Waterford got its.-points with Stan Jones’ 2ad in the jow hur- dies; a Sth in mediey relay (Bill Clark, Leroy Vogl, Jim Green, Darell Adams at 2:44.0); Gary Meeker’s share in 9 6-way tie for the 4th-Sth vault places. He won * the 5th.medal on a toss, * * * Skippers run against Wayne to- day at Waterford, go to Walled faces Southfield varsity Thursday on 1 the home field; _meets Royal! Lake Thursday fora dual test, tre’ 488 Bowlers. |Fail to Oust 8) ABC Leaders ROCHESTER, N.Y..(#—All: divi- sion leaders continued in place to- day after attempts by 448 bowlers jfailed to upset them yesterday at the 53rd annual tournament of the American Bowling Congress. Chicagoans figured at the to; all the day’s shooting in the events, |" Joe Simonis of Chicago’s Cole- of Dave Moffat took’ doubles honors for the day rolling a total of 1,218 on Reckase’s 636 and Moffat’s 582. Lillard and his partner Stan Gif- ford head this division with 1,331. |Were Inviting You to Come Help Cut Our Birthday: Cake! To celebrate 10 years in Pontiac and to salute our many good * These Prices Plus Tax and Exchange friends, we want you all to come to our 10th Birthday Party. We'll be serving cake and coffee every day this week. It's a gala open house. Ask for the cook's tour of our facilities. Any member of our staff will take time to show you around and answer any questions. Also ask about the Birthday prices. During this month- long sale, we intend to give unheard-of bargains in tires. Don't miss this chance to save... and to have a fine time at our party! TERMS — PAY 13 JUNE — 13 JULY — ¥z3 AUGUST RECAP TIRES 1 Year Guarantee—Same as New Tires . 6:00x16 ..°.. 6:70x15 7:10x15 7:60 x15 ON YOUR CASING QR EXCHANGE *7.77 . 38.88 $9.99 TLD ve PRICE BALANCING We balance the first 2 FREE when you buy a set of 4 —you pay for the last 2... ‘NEW FAMOUS BRAND TIRES TUBE 6.70x 15..... 7.10x15..... 7.60x15..... 8.00x15..... 8.20x15..... Plus Tax, Exchange WHITE SIDEWALLS, TOO! TYPE voce ee 312,45 seeeee 13.95 veeveee 15.95 veeeees 18.95 eee s 20.95 BUDGET TERMS ON ANY PURCHASE! FREE! COFFEE CAKE All Week GUARANTEED TAKE OFFS These tires were taken off of new cars when the owners changed to General tires! Open Friday ‘til 9 illiam — All Day Saturday of Charge! Tire Co. RAEBURN "Me = 2 a meses ksemoeee = — the) e ea me Vt Hs ” # “ i | fe “4, fe J it iy i rr Seo THE I PONTIAC PRESS, TU ESDAY, MAY 1, 1956. | Hollywood Headlines: Fredric March to Lint : Future Career to Movies + « By BOB THOMAS land occasional—very occasional— HOLLYWOOD (It's no wae BY: He is admittedly not too fond| legit ‘for Fredric March. of working for the home screens. A A | “Maybe, that’s because I blew! For 20 years or more, the ac tor | higher than a kite in my first ef- ~ |has been bouncing ‘back and forth) fort,” he laughed. “I was doing between Hollywood movie sets| ‘20th Century’ with Lilli Palmer. and the Broadway stage, with |All, at once [| came to a place mainhie lauccess| in cael fas now | Where 1 coujdn’t remember whap he plans to limit himself to oc- |$o Say next. easional movies. ; |. “Finally, Lilli fed me a line toJ~ eos |get me out of it. When I saw the “I'm 58. When you get as old as) | kine scope later, I died.” T am, you want to enjoy life. | ao Mostly that ean traveling to me. * * : Cottage Looters” ¥ Covghe Set Joseph Lebherr said Tuesday CHEBOYGAN a — State Police| four Cheboygan youths had admit- ted breaking into 14 cottages on ‘Mullet and Burt Lakes during the winter, taking $2,500 worth of hunt- jing and fishing equipment. Mest of | the loot was recovered. — ———E—E——E—EEEEE— EE Kiwanis Day At M-59 Speedway Sunday, May 6th walifying .. 1:30 P.M. Ist Roce ... 3:00 P.M. seenesaes ONE OF THESE THREE gsi aimee, @ Pier ANGELI- Ethel BARRYMORE "Leslie CARON ~ Kirk DOUGLAS @ \ ie GRANGER - James MASON Ps 1 he MINED Mora SHEARER © * * * preceeds go te W. ‘Kiwants Club reeth Activities. (Rain Check Date: May 13th) ¢ “T couldn't tace another long) NOW run in a Broadway show. We've’ thad. some pretty long runs in| Academy Award..Winner [shows like ‘Skin of our Teeth,”) =; "The American Way’ and ‘A Bell’ BURT sien | for Adano.’ It was fun-doing them, | LANCASTER: Mi | WATE R FO RD but I wouldn’t want to stick in a '| Hal Wallis’ tananns DRIVE-IN THEATER ' show for a year or two again. THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN GALS ON THE RANGE — Secretaries at the Winchester plant in | That’ s for the kids, the ones mith Cor. Williams Lake-Airport Roads Box Office 7:10 P. M. New Haven, Conn., spend an hour or so every Monday morning at |stardust in- “thelr eyes.” * rifle practice to keep in trim. : | sg 2 “NOW! thru THURSDAY ete e tame srownd | ppg COMES ~ E he af . have dinner) Cay GRANT * G2 KELLY Husband Seeks 300 Teachers a theater. If there's a party thatia to Conter H ere night, [ could meet my wife there. * LANA TURNER RICARDO JOHN MONTALBAN - LUND R iv uy wou fo Sue Martha” Wednesday | ur acic "SAM wous CALHERN -WANTED BY Dr. J. N. Hook, teachet; author YOU'RE STUCK — SESSION w UAGEN - FRANZ ‘and lecturer, will be on hand at} He made the same observation |i | Fifth Mate’s. Attorney Pontiac High tomorrow as 300\that 1 heard the late Walter BY TONIGHT Trying to Serve Comic teachers of English gather for their) Huston make in his later years: ry 9 annual conference sponsored by the |“‘If your play’s-a hit, you’re stuck Music by the With Summons Metropolitan Detroit Bureau of Co-| with it. If it’s a flop, it's no fun.” So-phis-to-cats es aad No Cover—No Minimum | operative School Studies. DELL’S INN * NEW YORK wW—An attorney for} The session scheduled to open at S© he’s going to stick to movies HHH HH HH “An Invitation to Excellent Food” ' THE, BROILER STEAKS, CHOPS, CHICKEN | ANRY'S “FINE LIQUORS—FINE FOOD - West Muron at Elizabeth Lake Road \comedienne Martha Raye’s fifth)1 p.m. has been arranged by Pon- |husband, Edward Begley, says he|tiac English instructor, Robert) ‘Discovers Generosity is trying to serve a summons on Beauchamp. her in a divorce suit, Begley is! pr Hook is professor of English Is Very Costly Virtue = oe ane) ie eye: © and a counselor in teacher prep FITCHBURG, Mass. «—Albert! ie ~ |aration at the University of Hlinois.| Joseph, 38, of Bellows Falls, Vt. LOVE ‘THEFT’ covering such subjects as la felt sorry for him because Last. Saturday she was sued for/His topic for tomorrow's meeting told police how his generosity : alienation of affections by “a 20-|will be “A Book is to Read.” |proved costly. rem year-old housewife, Mrs. Barbara) Following this talk, teachers will| * * «© Ann O'Shea of Westport, Conn. | break into. 10 discussion groups| He said he met a man in a ! \ } Pe . . . ling perceptive readers, fitting the! he longed for a beer and gave 2 ee ES 5 VES AWAY . Rohs patois aged edl mass media into courses, and] him the keys to his parked car . acclines' of kee policeman husband teaching of classics. \puhere some beer was stored. NOW | BS T ra n OPEN aia i : i. j | ! z ee , aj AND HITS THE ' [Miss Kaye's ara 2 aS More than 20,000 American stu- | When Joseph went to the car AND WED. 10:45 “A. M. = BIG STORY Ot ' iduty hours. Miss Raye has a h dents go abroad each summer to 20 minutes later, the man, = Ee We unde tn eueaion by aay ter oo “ee SENSATION FOLLOWS SENSATION V shecwants in The Westport police chief yes-'f — —— — As a Lynch-Happy Mob Hunts an exams | | FULL BLAST! oman opr forty a Doors Open oe ome ESCAPED ALCOHOLIC KILLER! further notice. Deoily ot $05 sie bak . ; Meanwhile, Miss Raye's attorney. 10:45 A.M. eS, asin cimeust Children 20 4 — | Shirley Woolf arrived here from cee Se Ge OS NOW PLAYING THRU WEDNESDAY! here ‘‘to clean up this ridiculous mess.” j ‘SHOCKED’ BY SUIT Pomme | Joh WAYNE wf = tne HIGH “/and had no romantic relationship) ) CO-HIT! ; Richard Conte in a . lwith the young er Claire ia ny, : < late dale “Case of the Red Monkey”: | The attorney i foe Raye’s a DAY , CinraascoPE a MIGH TY . Thurs. =g Stri in the San” & “The Crooked Wel “ fifth husband said he could not|] (MAS Giese : pes disclose details of the divorce ac-] MBEUMMI4i0) (ii 2 tion, including who would be named co-respondent, The couple) were married in 1954, Adultery is the sole ground for |divorce in New York state. Service Groups Offer . Facilitie for Infirm | ; ‘ ) TONIGHT - WED. THURS. | Giinton he v 10 of un WED - MARILYN iN) in “NIAGARA” ~« BOTTOM orm BOTTLE CinemaScoPE »y WarnerColor ~~ ace an beanie —~ IRMAMA OF Wer a M-G-M presents in Compaiaceen sh chiaa ROBERT TAYLOR - STEWART GRANGER “THE LAST HUNT” at 1:00—4:12—7:16—10:30 CO - FEATURE Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. North of Telegraph. Rd. Fe 5-4500 Ee, ‘= Q and its affiliates, Pontiac Encamp-{° an and “STRANGE LADY IN TOWN” ; af (oo ee “\iment No. 38) Welcome Rebekahe, an ; The shocking story of the crooked fight racket! ( ALL COLOR PROGRAM |No. 276 and Pontiac Rebekah, : No. as : = “THE SQUARE RING” ; 450 have announced the continu- : Fn lace of their hospital bed andJ ! Ren Ottee Opens € 20 7- * ' wheel chair service for this year. | Le ‘ TH U RS D AY! eae eel eel Z Phone FE 4-4611 _STARTS_ ‘(Raymond E. Kliné in conjunction jwith the 137th anniversary of the. IOOF. This service has been carried on, lin Michigan for 17 years by the, order with over a million dollars, |invested in equipment. The Pontiac. s jarea lodges have offered the beds) * jand chairs for home use locally’ itor the past 10 years, Kline said. | Mrs. Bessie Huston and Mrs. Raymond Kline, both of Pontiac, are in charge of the free service.' - From the moment he hit town... she knew , it was just a matter of time! Drive-In FONT iM ivaatie “COLUMBIA PCTURES presente Piiciic) Berry Fie.o- Susan SrRASBERa +2150 Opdyke Road || TONIGHT - WED. - THURS. The first: attempt by Israel's \farmers to grow rice has been successful. The rice was grown oes Soate repre fae lat plots in as = The fighting hero Rosai IND Russe. ae na em who'fought , me Rosgmany too hard’! = ' GARY . That bere nied cartoon guy | ra | RY Py with the eyes! DRIVE-IN THEATER A “MAGOO’S eS Stephenson . Maple (1 ) Lh Cae emenre « WARNER BROS ca « Chhenmaatbcoe€ _.w. ano WARNE RCTOLOR | eee | eee CANINE MUTINY iis Tr BIAFORD twa BELLAMY too STEIGER = , METH MONTGOMERY: ee nae ses wine em Larter 6 DUNE TNE CITT Peceemee THE MAN WHO . State. ENDS TODAY! tweeeee wy OTE PRE MIA Pemvented by ; : ALSO_— : NEVER WAS pn ee > aS “GIRL IN THE RED oF chien cLori: Bl eusmes Ts)/ DOORS OPEN 10:45 . ar ie cura Peper: | uaniés BICKFORD: wen BELLAMY: noo STEIGER | aliens ae) ATL |. EUZABETH MONTGOMERY: st CU enact? ne ys WEDNESDAY # DRITED STATES PICTURES Pretecnen « Srwocves oy OTTO PREM meee. + Prenaited top hecaeed oe broeere eer 1:09 - %: a Fi CiINEmaScoPE §f ee fre "es: p Deas on rae orm wacom a AND ALSO PLAYING _ WHEN CRIMSON HAIR AND SCARLET Lies % SET THE MISSISSIPP: AFIRE! Q Color by TECHNICOLOR Sterr : —CO-HIT— = ROSALIND RUSSELL - -LAMAS Eddie Albert rommcnmcouon | LEX BARKER * PATRICIA MEDINA = TECAOcOLOR AM ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE . ‘ ‘ o.. . PP AAAARGG AGA cose Fac we |__ T RT ey FOA TROT P t 1 ‘ = ly ( THE PONTIAC: PRESS: TUESDAY. MAY 1, 1956 Z AYER BATT WEE “ lal Produce DETROIT PRODUCE |,DETROMT. April 28 .(AP)~—The follow- prices cover sales of local) ‘grown wakes of No 1 ahd fancy ‘grades eats: t to the farmers’ markets by hi CHICAGO —-Old crop » soybeans Frat and sold by them in wholesale) spurted_ several cents to another P*praits—Appies, series of new seasonal highs in bu: No 1, 375-450 bu; ap les, Jonathan, mey, 4.60 bu: No 1 28 bi} ae ap “a early dealings on the Board of Meclioah, fancy, a 00 bu: No‘ Tra oda 3.50 bu; aoples orthern Spy, fancy, de t y-. ; laee bu: ‘No 1. 375-428 bu. apples, a | Steate's Red, teaey, $.00 bu; No 1. 378- After sting the new peaks, Negetabies-—Beets. topped. No ans bac! Trop’ td u ‘arrots, topped, No be fell but the old’ c jbu.. Celery root, No 00-150 doz months rémained above the pre-pchs. Chives, No i. 1 is dos behs. Horse- : radish, No p $ Lee vious close. Dealings were only 00° 1") 50-200 dos behs. Onions. dry, moderately active. 1D SIC el er In other grains corn showed con- } 50-200 32-Ib bag Parsnips. No 1, 1 00- siderable strength, particularly the }? Potatoes, fancy, neoishen, old crop mopths. Oats moved high- hothouss, We 1, 1 25-150 doz behs er in sympathy with corn. Wheat 1 76.40 5. tb box. “rh additiona , 1.00-1 50 doz behs lagged as at J moisture was 125-150 bu Turnip, topped. No 1, 2 received in parts of the winter wheat belt overnight. . * * * rhubarb. hothouse 2.60 bu 1500-1600 30-doz €ggs—Laree, medium, 1300-1400, small 900-11 Wheat near the end of the first DETROIT EGGS hou unchang ~ , . DETROIT. April W ‘AP; 4 $2. 35%: ed to licen il matron: casaae incl uded, er, ay corn ‘s .to grad Whites— Grade A jumbo 47-49 weig aS higher, May $1. 5234; oats Se to 34 ed average 4742; large a = wid avg se Lapa 39-41 wtd av small higher, May 65%; rye unchanged Diy" uV, j4ia, Grade Sree 40-41, L to Me (igher May 12004 oP dine orte 4 ne es and lard 10 to 20 cents a hundred © !arge 34-36, wtd ave 35'y. Checks Si _| MARKETS (Marke Lower. in Early | NEW YORK Delicious, tancy, 600 Market was lower today in early! trading with the decline quite ir-’ 7 regular Prices were down around 2 points) sas! lee at the outside while there were some gains going to a point. Trading was Neer and then stove _ | There was nue concerted move: 1.00 8-Ib box, No ‘ment almong. mijor oO Rutabagas, No sd is the early lineup; =| Steels mixed, 106, bers lower, farm implements un- changed to higher, changed to higher, radio-televisions' Fd etal: toe unchanged to lower, utilities stea- dy, nonferrous , ical mixed, railroads unchanged 4 to higher, oils "unchanged to * Fenestra Corp., pre Detroit Trade (iy -— The stock * * fast at the start) * groups. Here) | motors lower, rub- aircrafts un- metals lower, chem-: mixed and airlines: homer * cA Record Crowds See Motorama - General Motors Exhibit Sets Attendance Marks jin Five Cities 'No One Injured" During “|from behind by another. i} Four Car Accident There were .no injuries in an ‘unusual four-car accident in Inde- pendence Township late Monday morning. A_vehicle, operated by Ruby Hazel of Milford, was push- ing another driven by Elizabeth Hood of Clarkston. A third car in line slowed down and was struck Charles C. Friend, driver of the fourth vehicle, told Waterford The General Motors Motorama of 1956 ended its nation-wide tour in, Boston Sunday night with a new) five-city attendance mark of 2.214, 667. Attendance for the ll-day show-| ing in Boston totaled 471,096. Mo- 'torama previously had played to ‘record crowds in New York, Mi-! jami, Los Angeles and San Fran- ‘cisco. Record’ attendance high “for \this year was attained in Los An- geles where 572,929 persons saw the Motorama’s nine-day run. The five-city attendance was an all-time high for the four years the Motorama has toured the nation, It eclipsed by 127,541 the previous record of 2,147,126 set last year in the same five 4. fering of 1,278,833 shares of Gen- Township: police his brakes would REAL ESTATE “SALESMEN | {not hold in the hilly area. The ‘other operator was William E. Innis, of East Detroit. Foundation rerrrer< rrr 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 , 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 a > a > a a > > > P 4 2 > > > a > a > a a Ale Meet Your Frien!s in the Riker Fountain Rikef Bldg. Lobby pwwevevevr™ wyvvvvVYVTVY Sells GM Stock Offer Oversubscribed at $43.75 a Share— Below Closing Price NEW YORK tP—A secondary of- hence fet natn iota hats SSS - ; Commercially grade : i , May $14.40. * | Whites—Grade A large 41-43; medium Steel Products, . ed from the cities, M = Sian a ‘ isp acer el Palas bate large 40-41; | American Stock ‘Exchange to. the, President Harlow H. Curtice a beige ae atic assachusetts Grain Prices lier ee: medium 38: Small 30, Grede New York Stock Exchange today. | AP Wirephoto (General Motors said that the rec- York st = close et I CHICAGO, April 30 (AP) — Opening Cominent. Markel, steadier and tenti- It closed yesterday at 31 and ROYAL BIRTHDAY ASSIST — Prince Henri of Luxembourg, Td national attendance at the Mo-| 10! a change yesterday, _Lavestors : wer price leve: =i ? Wheat May cece ENO eet Prot es ued to 3 cents, lower Opened today at 31'z and then son of Prince Jean, heir to Luxembourg’s ducal throne, seems to be torama “‘is “indicative of the fact)was quickly oversubscribed. . | Jo cececess 234% July 5.°°02.. 131% Demand relatively siéw and supplies moved up another notch. kine f miehoay tolkd t th ndle on his first birthday at Americans continue to be vit-| The stock was offered at $43.75 a . I rust July ...0. 2.12% Sep .,.... 1.29's/ ample Trade was slow over the wee , « asking for somebody to blow ou e candle 0 rs y rod ; | DP ..eoce-. 213% Dee .. ..,. 1.324 end partly due to bad weather Bome| Among higher stocks were U. S. ke. The young pring celebrated his birthday with his father and | jally interested in the ie ucts of share—12 cents below the closing : | eng tees 210% soreenns Noor stocks offered at, discounts below iBteel. Caterpillar Tractor, Air Re- case: Ee F af h Beledord | our dynamic industry.” price on the exchange. A mutual investment company \ | oe } i om 7 May =. bas Ertes July ne an “yale : some commercially weade Taree, ‘duction, International Paper ant moter: Princess Charlotte of Belgium, at their home in | “Record breaking attendance at) The offering, with-a dollar value which supervises a diversified | OLY... ee LS DP creees whites taken in @ cents and large! mri Pau. the Motorama during its recentjof about $55,949,000, was made by ; F Dec ......0. 142% Nov ...s. 262 | & browns at 36% cents. Cities Servi oe ——— — a voee AN, Wes olio of investmen li ier veveeee 1.45% Jen Anoce J | * __ nation-wide tour reinforces myja nationwide underwriting group a are ven quaity , May ...cc0-. BS%e May ov. 14-18 CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS General sine. yesterday's most iopinion that 1956 will be another of 259 investment firms, It repre- | paved co ra a ores ae ‘aalle Wrchanie ee eo active issue off 48, opened today, W ne, Airline | USINSS Notes A year for the automotive in-/ sented one of the largest secon-/ a rpegedtue-maybe obtained from | Ore 2 ‘W% Oct $.32 1468000, wholesale. buying. prices un. ON 3,000 shares off % at 43% and. stry and for business in gen-, dary distributions of equity securi- aie “bik wc ut <22, then held around that level, Stan- = vel Wade sales eos Sar " Mr. Curtice said. ities in history. WATLING, eee yy ere Oil (NJ), yesterday's second Rete ave, ue S mong, The Motorama featured pix ex- The shares were sold for the ac- Halt Deporting "Ses Se2 2% ce cranes ces DISCUSS MOVE fe iS aa encom acon ma i A, an gowy LERCHEN & CO. a. we t | “ a ‘yer A Sato ae Pe 70 per pl aed Lae on 3,000 shares unchanged| lanmaal welding iioals pe nresent| Pontiac’s ‘‘Club de Mer”, Frigi- idation to diversify its portfolio of 116 Pontiac State Bank Bid tbe = “i. 8) ies Ue yeas dards a7: ‘at 60 M4. Sillatlthe Memorial Aa ditorium in ‘daire’s ‘Kitchen of Tomorrow, " alinvestments. The shares came to FE 4-2895 s ‘int os on | , County and American Buffalo, N. Y., May $11. stage and fashion show, research the foundation on the death of) | New York Stocks | : ‘and engineering exhibits and some Mrs, Alfred P. Sloan Jr., wife of, “S™S"oinee Leading Buchomece’ “ggcA0. Aves nfl dc beeeO, (Late Morning Quotations) j Confer About Switch contin) i fer) GL 150 other displays including GM's the recently retired GM board -----~------------ —— foal U8. shipments ¥ Pri rigay 679 ote. Batur: pee pre et a om aac in Airports lfense bond to John L. Libertine, os Sous a EAE Gros | Please send me without obligation prospec: nies 54; sun ay 20; ou pi les moderate, “iy Tn joe .... al ‘of 434 Shoreview Dr., has been | tus on Massacuusatrs Invastoas Taver, Solons and Immigratio | Stoneay: moore aged alin, Unecosiog| |Allted chem : “ee int Tel & ai ao2 Ww : ee: snare by offic rials of Chevro- Canada produced more than) Service Move to Help steady; carilot iveck, sales old stoc | Age Chalmers 68.2 es os csi “7 DETROIT UW—Wayne County o et's “Double Payoff" truck con- Securi Oal 4,500,000 tons of steel in 1955, a Name ae Lad in Detroit lg terrace gute aa’ mice bakers & Alcoa... .c..1194 Jeph wean” srg ficials and American Airlines: , 44 per cent increase over produc- Addres 000.000.0000. ccceeeceeseaneee German ad in trol \Pontiare ceahes ena River Valley Am Airline -. 236 jones @ 1, . | 51 est. ti 1944 and ly th i stock Baxrivals 31; on irae 6, ll io cae 50 —. Kelsey Hayes 32 4, opened talks today on a proposal, Associated with Matthew-Har- ion in and nearly three times (7) ea peoe scpobeeuonassasnacs: Siate xe oa ration “ashed in demas anes conartet quam Gas & El.. 678 reneecen ... b8.3/t0 move the airline from Willow graves Inc, as new car and truck = Lond as in a 1808. - — 3 pediareyd ww — ' : pedaalapoal hites $35. in $0 Ib sacks 2.75 an ee renee. 68 20¢ Run Airport to Detroit-Wayne Ma- manager, Libertine submitted a top U in Uan a S= Sa —= order held up. oa Eee aie rom “ |Am.N. Gas ... 683 Ree a 3 I slogan. Entranig were required to < . men youn Oe < ers for help Poultry [Am ‘Red i. aaa Lige & My .. 103 2 Wes make 15 truck’ sale contracts for) ||, , , 714 Community Nat’) "en. Poter a Shy and Rep. | DETROIT POULTRY ‘Am Beating 311 Tor Olas... ea_| American is the only “line of each submitted. High Court Hands Off ( DETROIT, April 20 (AP)—Prices paid|AM Tel & Tel 181.7 Lit MeN & L 162/seven major carriers at Willow! ee Ach 6 5 Bank B ildi Rabaut (D-Mich) proposed xe in- Ete Hoaltry ‘up te Detroit for No 1 queuty | An Ne ald tees A eth hh Run which bas indicated a willing; The Michigan Chapter of the: ction on ommunists ul ng troduce bills c - ve , - pe pol og Etta ly efi Perper ert Gated ek ne CA ae ca) Wa Cle d Phone FE 4-1568-9 — witites 2, 2¥P"caponeties 44%] a. 6 ie Armour & Co pe Meck es, : 07 ee ah epcahe The peat and Casualty Underwriters will rs commission. 32, heavy” ducks 31. artin . wants a e lines to ma "arm- Janey M6. Ovi. comet sg omment Market quit. Recents ant) Aisha a My MeOr*E, MB switch meet at the Botefoed) lon in) Fearne WASHINGTON (uh ‘The Sub- er of immigration and naturaliza- [eet whee Might weekend carryovers sup: At) Seis we HEL Cope oid abe hada an ington May 8 to honor candidates | i. Activities Control Board word down from e8 eq . a rie . ; waka yoeey ry ees | pale Fl . hin a aan oc < Leroy C. Smith, county high- for CPCU examinations. (SACB) pondered today what to do BA Kk R & HANSE N the scheduled May-25 deportation CHICAGO. April 8 (AP) Live paar enact ae prsempgeiter) 9 Pyrt ped Grp oes om troy | Arthur D. Stover, of 8020 Locklin bout a Pag cour pion i | steady, ‘ 1,14 Jeth Steel... 12 : 4 nana L of Otte Weyer, a 19-year-old col- = pop gery ol erg Dad A imal owing Air... 85 6 Mueller Br 345! expects to iron out minor con- Dr., will attend the 60th American lige thee he. a ie flac lege freshman, ee Sictroogters iio, cabonetvee un ane fine. is) Nat Caen ROS tract differences with American Foundrymen's Society Castings Sara corcuied "by. (Moscre: Richard H. DeWiu Donald E. Hansen Weyer’s scrape with immigration ¢ Got thos 0-80: ovet A Ios 28.5-31,| ieee ie $37 Nat Oyps 582| Im two days of talks. Congress in Atlantic City, N. J.. 74 Pedy vk Res. FE 5-3793 Res. FE 2-5513 uckiings : ++ 22-7 wat Lead ..... 004 'May 3-9. Stover is distri : _ innocently last) - Bris My ...... 36.1 y strict manager . 6) ‘ori ' . authorities san nad ae ; Sym Balke cs 3h et Ceres: 454) | Tit Scied) Rel expected to seek sn: the Electro Refractories &, The court's 63 decisiot Jeft It? Accident Insurance Fire Insurance wheat in Windsor, Ont., just! Livestock j eet oi shed ph tepid 50 TH approval of a shame contract by Abrasives Corp. which will exhibit UP to the board to decide which 1 Automobile Insurance Life Insurance the tRve. { DETROIT LIVESTOCK Sao H 182 Noam Av... 917 soa Roget at te of Supervisors | several products including Tercod of these two courses of action tof | iability Insurance» Plate Glass Insarance across the Detroit River. » | — : >» 41 Nor Pac. 83 /by mon .. take: i * casino authorities 2" wo, fewreatiy ate and bids O'8 Can Pac 0. 344 Bais Qin .. ar'| The county is preparing a yy ocr, eine cone ene fee peg | Bonds— All Types _ Rather than explain 'No. 1 and 2 190-220 lb barrows and gilts|Capital Air Owens II ai. 726/\million dollar expansion program) . Ue a Rew ing ty - | e 6.18-16,00 25 ite her, \\Carrier Cp .., 60 ‘ j " at the border he had left Sone owed by “higher ries we Spies, ee ag : a4 so & x .. brs at the airport. It also plans a three | Mt. $2 Lincicome, vice president termine the truth of the party’s | crossing permit. at home, Weyer 5° ait cr wel e a One” 655 Penh -- %1\million dollar hanger and freight , 3... a VISE , allegati that perjury was com- = : told them he was born in the Unit- ""Gattie—saiabie 3.100. Largely slaugh- ‘Chrysler yen oS parce, ae a terminal construc tion (Program. re Pontiac s Drummers one ited ty there ll pavernenent creas reer me - snoula render ge I ed States and was passed. kid eats Tprcdiueas cones Wiaamsceentt Clare quip «198 Penney. Jc o¢ Wee s currently attending age witnesaca 2 Paul Greach, new isn't president than why | am. almon P, Chase. : cit Mo ... 9, Cial insurance course sponsore His conscience, however, got ‘pening erisneds neppreey camel ae Thigh Cluett. Pea... 492 Priner er Bs Revel by “American biel alae the Aetna Casualty ee oty eel wh a es the best of him. When he, his. good snd choice fed steers 20 00.22.00 ered bee Goole g, Ces Ls oa! |year period would pay expansion | * | ‘ Harvey Matusow. igh choice 150 Ib steers 21.50. Rather COM Palm ... 888 pnitco ° costs Smith said, Besides rental,|!" Hartford, Conn. The five-week! 9 Assume the nth od hs —————— —w mother, Erna and his father, Jo- 250, Soiume mostly choice rade 21.00- Ce) + 261 phitp Mor <2. Hy ‘course will consist of lectures and seph, were taking on examina- D poea wee Srisseis sen o most: \Comv Ed ats Pri fhe the Contract) aise icalts’ foe” about clinics conducted hy home offi e. alan sttons | hed) Wi neet etter tion for naturalization last Au- (Chole fed neifers 19 00-19. terceas com Gon a tote Gr. ee ee Tee " pace. ¢harg 7" specialists in all forms of insur pearing. cxpence the See R nters. gust, Otto admitted the decep- ae ree ors eects se “can ers Con, Bow pt 108 Piiman Be on to office bo office parece charges. ‘ance and honding ipecection oe the three witnesses from the e D e is ‘and cutters most = ; utllity!Gong Can rr : 5 : ; d commercial bulls 14.00-16 00; small Cont Mot TI RCA cleise ‘ = : His ation was ordered for sd cea goed = Bi sterr Lage tphtved ue: :|Cont On ed ner Det S ame J. row ey Bert Sipple, chemical engineer ‘‘In either event.’ said Justice faery grammy oe sind q stockers 18.00 my Y y ; “Curtisn Wr mt Rey Tob B ... for the Shell Oil Co., will: be the! Frankfurter for the court majority. —) b, trance from Cana n news| Calves—Sala' J sslera opening | Deere 14 Reteway St aa A " main speaker, tonight at the reg- ‘the board must then reconsider dy. But ket not fully Det Edi 42 : | of Otto's plight and the reason |Shout see Pay caleapecd and choice Dis C Seag . 167 “ iets ms Sp ssistan osition uar monthly meeting of the De- its orizinal determination in the spread he got action that made vealers 20.00-26.00. Some held higher. Deer a es Scorille Mia 30.2 . troit-Saginaw Valley Chapter of the jicht of the record freed from the ; him Se yesterday, ‘God cuCaae LiveeTOCK [Du Pont ons Rearekhves 333 Appointment of Patrick J. B. Society of Die Casting Engineers. challenze that now beclouds it.” Come in real $00n and let's bless you all. CHICAGO, April 30 +AP)—Salable East Kod $2.6 Siieit 0 ‘, Crowley, a Chevrolet dealer in Tea iene Ob” owes oe ee ee . 2 * . hogs 8.000, fairly active and uneven; EI “auto yitte 47 socone Mob 0.6 Providence, R.I., as administrative sistant Hydraulic Oils.” The event munist Party was dorninated by have a chat about homes The Weyers came to the United atiacsersihy 51 bignat, co velewere: "BE Emer Rea J eeu eo 553 Assistant to Ivan L. Wiles, execu- Will take place at Devon Gables. y{oseow and therefore required to | States in 1950 from Gelsenkirchen, higner than Friday's average; most Bx-Celi-0 "gy 4 Soerry Rand 2°? tive vice-president in charge of register under the 195) Internal and gee how we can help Germany mixed grade lots No. 2 and 3 200-270 Ibs pairy Mor ya, Std Brand adel | Albert L. I iet {40 Bl E ; . . ‘butchers 15 25-75; numerous sales around Pirestone m4 - or cain ‘ro ealer relations, was announced to. Albert L. lampletro, o 3loom- Security Act, disclosins its fi- : eee oa lasts 100s ert ebee| Food Mach $36 Ba Ou on’, éaa day by Wiles. The appointment is fe ‘Id nae be recently cited nances and membershit! you own one of your own. these weights 1585, and a 71 head lot Freepot sul o12 Stevens, JP bes effective immediatety. or top sates achievement by the Door of Safe Foils |t¢.00. evel ea he 3 ena oe Gen Bake an Sun. one Pr Crowley, before assuming the Lederle Laboratories Division of k : bs 1435-1825, a. few lots 170-196 Ibs Gen Dvnam 602 Sit & Co 888 presidency of the Crowley Chevro. the American Cyanamid Co. at an ‘hrvs er ic S ed Truck Sales Yeggs 1T $0213 18. melee Teelectea) “Tots. 300-330 Gen Fas” 358 Eerat Ay a * tet Company in Providence in &nnual sles award banquet ‘os to 14.00 Gen Mills as@ Tex G Bu June, 1953, had bee smber of Absecon. N. J. The citation onsikt. : a. 5 Thomp Pd aS ; . i na member oi ; ; ene SeameHateea eG ade Gea hee $42 Timk R Pear 77 ‘the General Motors Legal Staff ed of a zo cup, one of several or mo ex ivision Failure to pry open the door of titty to so higher, mostly 25-50 up. Gen Tel a7 Tren Ww Alr 230i, presented at the event a safe foiled thieves in a breakin cows steady to 28 higher, bulls tully Gen Tin a Tp lracsemer aura fom 15 years . . ata city truck sales establishment "tt? ‘eslers about steady, no early Gillette ay went Con. 286) A native of New York City, Mr oe DETROIT, (# — Chrysler Corp Sorietiane between Sunday after- Seeraue pcime tabi rime ci 11 Ibe Meodrich -.) 843 ('n Carbide (128 ¢ Crowley received both his bachelor |, DETROIT (INS) — Ivan L. announced today that G. W. Trich- noon and Monday morning. A (rs pee pelle Ge Noads [prime (1.280- re ere at Orit aire” a4 Of arts and law degrees from Ford- Wiles, General Motors executive el has been named president of its + tal of $9.60 was reported missi 1420 Ts steers | 73-00-2400, load! lott on wo Ry... 496 Onlt Prot... si@ham University. After serving ‘'* presidentiinicharge otidealec Armplexm Division. eo I! ' et sa ISSINE steers 22 25-2350: bulk choice steers ou ona, ae on Gerice : ae three years a¢ a law clerk in New relations, announced tceday ap- Trichel. who has been execytive Gt a ees ae oe . alge a pacer gone tee cnet Gut on. 1184 TS Rabrer ° 84 York he joined the legal staff of pointment of Patrick J. B. Crowley yice president and gereral man- : City police sai le Person OF ter Holstein steers 1600, two loads choice Holland FP .. 1) 4 Mest Leto 695 General Motors in New York in 2S his administrative assistant. ager of Amplex since July, 1954, 7 - . seen had a em ge drive te moe pre he deal ee sone Meer aT laa Walgreen ; 174 1938. : Appointment of Crowley, a Prov- sueceeds A. J. Langhammer, who Capitol Savin & Loan Co haft . nl y fa “4 s ‘ vo ear i in the atten tt 0 e ‘th ate. Cal colo gradecias (ete eunistans Induet Ray ZL qed Wert Up Tel ..207) He was transferred to the Detroit idence, R. 1, Chevrolet dealer, is retiring after operating the di-, gs . > hears m0 zi ; Sale. commercial cows 11.25-14.00, canners and jn ns Bend eas a Safe A ee mae office of the Legal Staff in 1912. 'S effec tive immediately. vision sinee its inception in 1929. ; onal ea el xia GUT i et iene: est gana Soares ae SS M1 Wilton & Co is | —__—_—___ — —— Trichel was born in Trichel. La., 75 West Huron St. — FE 4-0561 c s esks were YA@N- vealers .21.00-2500 cull” noir mnteriak tr 117 ooWlowrth . Se M, 1898, ; btaine is = : SSeS sacked. Entry was believed to have 1000-21 00 an tnt varvann 3s yours anaT = Resident of Birmingham Senate Confirms Berry B " ae an he U's eee been gained by breaking a window _—— Int Nick 45 Zenith Rad > Admits Lesser Crime WASHINGTON — The Senate Academy in 1918, his M.S. degree ; q : on the west side of the building, scoomding (0 ree to police. Blackwood wood Elected : to Head Briggs Co. was elected president and general manager of the Briggs Manufac- 0 18-60 Formed by Firms eee ee Rails Utils eto im " ‘his circuit court arraignment ¢ Calf. as assistant Secretary of de- in 1938 ve an - aie x . . ' Neonitsanes 13 1811 729 1906 On charges of breaking into an fense for properties and installa- : Previous day 702 1814 728 19972 Avon Tow ; , tions and Lewis E. Berry of Che- Inauguration of the Michigan In- Week ago 277 1803 73.2 IRD? | Tomnehip grocery store Apu i o: Mich Anant che 6 Month ago 2727 1470 «748 ines 4, yesterday agreed to plead guilty beygan, Mich. as eputy civil de- surance nformatic Service Year ago .,. 2218 1357 127% ss ae “ - mbt cca mau a Tyce 4 jose high , 2782 1814 752 is to a reduced charge. fense administrator iblic service organization of 195@ tow .., 2440 1280 716 1716 Smith will be sentenced for lar- — _ lac i Chis raeuaiiviineumnoc 1958 high 2578 1424 187 18158 r ; DETROIT wp — A. D. Blackwood Michigan casualty insurance com- j373 joe art ied era dasaceny from a building by Judge turing Co. yesterday, He succeeds general counsel of Michigan Mu- Everett E. Lundberg, who retired. Blackwood has been. associated and chairman of the new organiza- Insurance Service panies, with the plumbingware manufac-tion. turing company for 32 years. Fred W. executive vice president and as- Lansing. is secretary, sistant general manager. Also re- elected were W. Dean Robinson, chairman of the board and W. R. Fannin, secretary-treasurer. MKT Plea of Guilty Entered on Auto Theft Count Charged with’ cafrying an un- licensed gun in his car April 3. Robert L. Carson pleade yesterday, in circuit court. Carson furnished bond of $100. \ He will be sentenced. May 14 by- Oakland County Cireuit Judge States, says the National Geogra- stolen from the yard of home at ment. : phic Society, Frank L. Doty. . Sfauee seed yvery year, ' Hofman was re-elected Owners Insurance was anneunced today IL. J. Carey. STOTK AVERAGES NEW YORK, April 30—Compiled . News in Brie ews in dFie; Simple larceny resulted in a 30- day sentence for a Ferndale youth Monday. Freddie Harris, 18. was PROTECTION For a Few Pennies Per Day! | Call us now for tion on how to protect your boat and motors for a very small amount of money. informa- High Low Noon = lodged in the Oakland County Jail i W. HUTTENLOC , ‘ents Allen Elee & Equip Co® ‘4 PHILADELPHIA INS) Amert HER Ave tual Liability Company, Detroit, Baldwin Rubber Co* : 13 » Enters Guilty Plea Riscose Corp feported net income for wren he did not pay fine and costs ency | Gemmer Mfg C 44 lth t 4ed March 31 710 | ‘Gt taker or & Cher Co 14 to Non- -Support Count equa Ste ate . peta Geers wt mis totaling $50 after pleading guilty H. W. Huttenlocher’ ‘ Max E. Kerns | Hale pipe mec $1 ne ' compared ape A $5, ice 10,000 or $1 i" ee to the charge. The arr aiznment: : . etal Prod Co* 127 ») Pe comin nm a t tod ; W. C. Sparl, secretary of Auto- abe ay chee Co , 4 4 16 A former Hazel Park on Who veer Bales increased to 868 576.000 es was held bv Roval Oak Tewnship 318 Riker Bidg. FE 4-1551 - Campan Co 6 6 @ Waived extradition from Water- $66,418.00 in the. initial. three m onths | Justice Delbert W. Hint.’ pany, Toledo Edison Co 144 194 144 gyn South Dakot: eee 1955 Frank H Retchel. chair ! : and Edward Warne ectee Hite Co. it 12 5 ee Akota, to answer I estcwed ae ceuredaionsnaqile © sale i] " d = yj "| 1 . 7 h i Rockwell, public relations director ene aske _ charges that he failed to support eens Nannie pence en GU: Archie L. Nipper. 35. ot Oxters: of Detroit Automobile Inter-Insur- p- \his two children here, pleaded he expected business will improve in was fined $15 and paid $15 court ance Exchange, is treasurer. Fined for Recklessness —*_ guilty to the count yesterday at ‘P* '*** Delf of the year costs after pleading zuilty to | Effective Vo day. . Apri 1 30th } Pupposes of MIIS include estab-; A White Lake Townshi ___ his circuit court arraignment. CHICAGO (INS) — Pullman Inc an- driving without an opcrater’s WOT ay, prt t eben Be al patie! infeeraation cet be e acs — Poteau Delwyn Thompson will be senanounced anet recone ee pipe [auarcen license. He was arraigned before All P l E h Ww O ded t with, a tS and $25 coats after plea tenced May 14 by Oakland County $132 a common share This compared Justice Emmett J. Leih of Spring: rincipa xcnanges ill pen and education program with ing guilty to reckless driving Mon mith 01,275,873, or 88 cents a comm field Township yesterday. and Close One Hour Ear'ier! share, in ne same periac ast oar ry irespect to the casualty insurance day, Andustry in Michigan, and promo: 25 101 Lakeview St.. tion of the cause of traffic, indus- after - arraignment before Justice) trial and with the public and-in cooperation: guilty with organizations devoted to or, ‘Duck Boat Siblen' interested in public safety. Keller, 42, of rcult Judge Frank L. Doty. paid the c a Vernie L. Detroit Man Admits Charge of Indecency household safety, both. James Southart ae Keer) Harbor. City police are investigating a St., was not George 791 Monticello street Sunday) jvalue at +2 !Frank L.. Doty, * | rs Charged with indecent exposure, t |Jackson H. Allington, 13343 Prést f°, eee | Detroit, pleaded guilty yester- The first president of the United! complaint that a duck boat was day at his circuit court arraign- loss Allington, who provided bond of ' ;Washington. He was John Hanson (night qr during the day Monday. '$100, will be sentenced May 14" | About 30 million Americans buy of Maryland—under the Articles Owner’ Ronnie Smith -placed the by Oakland County Circus Judge: (et Confederation. Sales inereased to $07,250,385, a of pe _months of DETROIT hat ofit of $7,141,920 on the sa a supsidisry In’ the first of last year the company los after wm tax recovery of $634 as attributed to hi, In 1955 the US. steel ‘payroll was $3, cad codtth r cent over the initial three 1955 ‘AP)} — American Motors yesterday reported a net loss of mal 17. of Detroit. 554 for the six months ended March e loss was after a nonrecurrin ‘in this years January- March period \w ec costs of intro- Heel and rapid yolume production of | 1986 Rambler and to th retail car sales tn the last three months | ump. Pleading guilty to entering with- out permission. Daniel J. William- was sentenced to serve 40 days in Oakland County te of stoc Jail by Justice Allen C. Ingle of sit comtn| ‘Farmington Township Rummage sale. Kirk in the Hills. (Lake House) W. Kong Lk. Rd. BI. | e drop in| Hills. May 11. 9-2. —Adv. | ff your friend's in jail and needs industry bail. Ph FE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031 j —Adv- Our new office } 8:30 a. m.— C. J. Ney phice Co: ‘818 Community National wh NEW TRADING HOURS 9 A. M. to 2:30 P. M. ours will be 4*30 p. m. FE 2-9119